In what has become one of the busiest months ever for CPU introductions, Intel got its final say on Tuesday with the launch of its much-anticipated Nehalem EX. The new processor line encompasses the Xeon 7500 and 6500 series and will be the basis for shared memory SMP systems from dozens of server makers, including HPC stalwarts like Cray, SGI and Bull.
Nehalem EX’s biggest claim to fame is its 8-core footprint (a first for Intel), although 6-core and 4-core variants are also available. Since the new chip is intended for the “expandable” server segment, platforms from 2 to 8 sockets are supported natively, with the 4-socket server being the sweet spot. Custom implementations can expand the CPU count much further, however. SGI’s Altix UV 1000, for example, can aggregate as many as to 256 CPUs into a single cache coherent NUMA system.
Up to 16 memory slots can be attached per Nehalem EX socket for a maximum memory capacity of 1 TB on a 4-socket server. Four memory channels per socket should keep RAM access humming along nicely for most data-intensive applications. (If a better bandwidth-to-compute ratio needed, it’s probably worth looking into the 6-core and 4-core variants.) In any case, the large 24 MB of L3 cache should help data access in general, although, to be fair, only the top-bin parts provide that much L3. All the others come with either 18 MB or 12 MB.
For traditional enterprise applications, Nehalem EX is being positioned to bring mission-critical computing to the mainstream. Business intelligence, ERP, OLTP, and basically any heavy-duty enterprise application that fits into a virtualized server environment is fair game. Thanks to the impressive core count, memory support and new RAS features of the new chip, Intel is aiming is to grab market share from the RISC CPU-based SMP platforms that own much of this mission-critical space today.
For HPC, the EX silicon is positioned to support technical applications that can benefit from large amounts of shared memory, high CPU counts, or both. Here we’re talking about memory-intensive or I/O-intensive applications like CAE, EDA, life science simulations, seismic modeling codes — really any HPC workload that relies on large datasets and can benefit from a shared memory model. In a scale-out cluster environment, SMP servers also have a place since they reduce the number of nodes, and thus simplify cluster management, network infrastructure, and software costs.
While the Xeon 7500 series is the mainstream product line for Nehalem EX, the 6500 series is a 2-socket-only offshoot that was designed specifically for the HPC market. As such, the 6500 seems to be positioned halfway between the 7500 and the Xeon dual-socket CPUs, the 5500 and 5600 (Nehalem and Westmere EP, respectively). Basically the 6500 is aimed at lower cost dual-socket servers for applications that need larger memory footprints and higher bandwidth than EP-based platforms can muster.
For the time being, though, all the HPC platforms announced in conjunction with the EX launch are using 7500 silicon. Here’s a rundown of two of the more interesting systems introduced by HPC vendors this week.
SGI Adds Mini-SMP to Altix UV Stable
SGI’s use of Nehalem EX in its Altix UV (Ultraviolet) line, was well documented here in HPCwire and elsewhere, when the machines were previewed back in November 2009. The mid-range UV 100 (up to 96 CPU sockets and 6 TB of memory) and the top-of-the line UV 1000 (up to 256 sockets and 16 TB of memory) are based on SGI’s NUMAlink interconnect and custom chipset that extends the new CPU’s SMP capabilities significantly beyond its natural 8-socket limit. As such, the UV 100 and 1000 represent the largest x86-based SMP systems on the market today.
SGI decided to use the official Nehalem EX launch this week to introduce an entry-level Ultraviolet, the UV 10. It’s a 4-socket rackmount server with a top core count of 32 and maximum memory capacity of 512 GB (or 1 TB if you want to pay for outrageously expensive 16 GB DIMMs). Although, the new system is much smaller than the UV 100 and 1000 models, it comes with a lot of I/O expansion capacity. Ten PCIe I/O expansion slots are available, aimed principally at storage and networking cards. ”In terms of a quad-socket server, this is one of the highest-end options available in the marketplace,” said Geoffrey Noer, SGI’s senior director of product marketing
The UV10 doesn’t use the special chipset or NUMAlink interconnect of its larger siblings, but is still able to run the same software stack. The cut-down UV can be used as an application development machine for a larger UV production system or as a dedicated machine for bite-sized shared memory applications. SGI is also positioning the UV 10 as a service node for large conventional clusters, and is intending to sell them as such with the Altix ICE line. A list price of $33,250 is quoted for a mid-range configuration: 4 Xeon X7542 processors (6-core, 2.66 GHz), 32 GB of memory, and a SATA boot drive.
HLRN (Germany), CALMIP (France), the Institute of Low Temperature Science, Hokkaido (Japan), and the University of Tennessee (US) have UV 100 or 1000 machines on order, with the first systems slated to begin shipping in the second quarter of the year. The UV 10 systems are available immediately.
Cray and Bull Team Up on SMP Offering
Nehalem EX has also spurred Bull and Cray to jump on the SMP bandwagon. In this case though, it’s a two-for-one deal. Both vendors are using the same Bull-designed hardware for these systems and adding their own branding, software stacks, and custom support on top. The Cray-branded CX1000-S is under its new line of entry-level and midrange HPC machines that the company introduced last week, while the Bull supernodes fit into the bullx product line under its Extreme Computing portfolio announced last year. According to Ian Miller, senior vice president of the productivity solutions group and marketing at Cray, they very much liked the Bull technology. And since each company has more or less staked out different geographical territories — Bull in much of Europe and Cray everywhere else — the partnership just made sense to everyone involved.
The CX1000-S and bullx supernodes scale to 16 sockets (128 cores) and 1 TB of memory. Since 16 sockets is beyond the 8-processor reach of the Nehalem design, a custom-built node extension technology is employed. The implementation is somewhat unconventional though. Instead of an integrated node controller, the engineers opted for a custom “coherency switch” that aggregates up to four quad-socket Nehalem EX-based servers into one.
To back up a little, there are actually two variations of these machines: a compute node and a management node. In the Cray stable, the product set is split into the CX1000-SC (compute) and the CX1000-SM (management) models. The matching offerings from Bull are the S6010 and S6030.
The compute node is an L-shaped 1.5U box that houses up to four Nehalem EX chips hooked together via the native QPI links. Multiple boxes can be jigsawed together to construct larger SMP nodes (up to a maximum 6U, 16-socket configuration) via the aforementioned coherency switch.
The management node is a 3U box that comes with six PCIe slots, and in that sense is similar to the I/O-expandable UV 10. And like the SGI offering, this machine is meant to be used as a service node for a cluster or as a standalone compute node for apps that need lots of I/O capacity. It can also be expanded into larger SMP configurations via the magic coherency switch.
The SMP building block nodes will be shipping soon, but the coherency switch hardware won’t be available until later in the second quarter. Cray has quoted a starting price of under $100,000 for the CX1000 line in general. Pricing on the bullx supernodes is not public.