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What does Intel's Xeon E7 mean to your datacenter?

By | April 6, 2011, 9:17am PDT

Summary: Dual-socket servers with massive memory support hit the sweet spot for the datacenter upgragde path.

With the revamp of the Xeon processor line and its claims of performance gains and energy savings I’ve been receiving the expected avalanche of press releases from various vendors announcing everything from their new serves based on these latest CPUs to the announcements of new world records in performance benchmarks, making use of vendor software on Intel’s new Xeon or hardware running those benchmarks, or a combination of both. At the same time I’m getting stories about how flat IT datacenter spending is, and that while the market continues to grow, there has been little, if any, increase in IT budgets. So what does this mean to you and the latest CPUs for your datacenter?

One of the telling items about almost every press release and news story I’ve seen is that they don’t contain any pricing information.  This is usually the case with enterprise server hardware announcements, especially early in the product cycles, but with the rather steep cost of the flagship 10-core E7 processor hitting over $4600 in quantities of 1000, it’s not surprising that vendors are a little hesitant to be quoting prices for hardware designed to use multiple of these very pricey CPUs.

Cisco was pretty much the first vendor out of the gate with news about their new forthcoming server lines, and with the official announcement of the CPUs was quick to point out that they held the majority of the performance benchmarks that Intel was showcasing at launch time. Dell and HP have announced new server products that, unsurprisingly, claim new levels of performance and energy efficiency, and oracle in an excellent example of why they don’t understand how to be a hardware vendor, showcases their new Sun Fire systems with a world record for a 4-way box on the SPECjb2005 benchmark while previously joining Cisco to announce their combined world record (Oracle software/Cisco server hardware) on the SPECjEnterprise2010 benchmark, in I presume, an attempt to prove that they aren’t competing for hardware sales with their software partners. I’m sure this vote of confidence will do wonders for the sales of their Sun Fire X86 servers.

So if you have systems that are running flat out and need more headroom, or have major analytics or business intelligence systems that need more oomph, you’re likely the perfect customer for the top of the Intel E7 processors. But what about the majority of us, who are just looking to improve our bottom line gradually, as we age out older systems and update our infrastructure? From where I sit the most interesting announcements are those, so far, from Dell and Cisco.  Their product lines now include dual-socket systems that architecturally support the memory you used to need to buy a 4-way box to get; 32 DIMM slots.

With virtualization and a pair of 8 or 10 core systems, these boxes will hit the sweet spot of the virtualized datacenter.  Plenty of horsepower, the ability to support multiples of even high-use VMs and a reasonable price for purchase will make systems in this class the logical choice for replacing older, much less capable hardware, giving the all too common problem of  ‘I’m running a 4-way box now, but a new one is too big a hit on my budget.”

This hardware class isn’t getting the play that the fastest and biggest new hardware is seeing, but it’s the perfect place for most datacenter IT to start their evaluation.

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With more than 20 years of published writings about technology, as well as industry stints as everything from a database developer to CTO, David Chernicoff has earned the term "veteran" in the technology world.

Disclosure

David Chernicoff

David does not invest in the technology he covers. As a freelance author and technologist he has had contract work with many vendors in the industry. Beyond the term of these short-term contracts there is no business or fiduciary arrangement with any technology vendor. David does not enter into contracts that would limit his freedom of expression in any way, nor is he remunerated for discussing any vendor. All comments in his blog writings are solely the opinions of David Chernicoff.

Biography

David Chernicoff

With more than 20 years of published writings about technology, as well as industry stints as everything from a database developer to CTO, David Chernicoff has earned the term "veteran" in the technology world. Currently the principal of an independent consulting business and an active freelance writer, David has most recently been a Senior Contributing Editor for Windows IT Pro magazine, having also been the Lab Director for Windows NT Magazine, Technical Director of PC Week Labs, the author or co-author of a number of books on different versions of Windows, a plethora of eBooks on various technology topics, and of approximately 3000 magazine articles in print and on the web.
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RE: What does Intel's Xeon E7 mean to your datacenter?
FAULKNE 13th Oct
Good day to confirm this comment I would appreciate T h e b e s t o f Z D N e t d e l i v e r e d your website very nice to everyone Yes, Oracle is the only one with shared-disk architecture, but that is there advantage. It means you can add or remove nodes and the database lives on. In a shared nothing architecture, if you lose a node, you lose the system. I'm sure Oracle appreciates EMC highlighting their advantage.I also desire to signal in your RSS feeds. Thank you as soon as once again and maintain up the great operate Awesome post! Thank you very much || thanks for nice content this is really benefit to me.
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More Cores more problems you got
JLChaconM 6th Apr 2011
I've found that big problem to move from less cores to more cores are the software licensing where currently you have to pay in core basis... sure u have some tricks to cut the price in this concept but we still have to pay a lot for software... so hardware and software makers must deliver new licensing models.
@JLChaconM

Windows Server is licensed per socket. Our advice to service providers has always been to model the costs or high core density against socket license count and buy based on that.
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It means I can run my a lot more virtual machines.
2 processors with 10 cores each and hyperthreading = 40 cpus seen by the host = awesome.

However, that will also require more memory which isn't cheap...
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