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Make The Case - Server Efficiency

Sun extends blade lineup

Michael Kanellos and Stephen Shankland CNET News

Published: 07 Jun 2007 09:42 BST

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Sun extends blade lineup

Sun released a bevy of blade products on Wednesday in an effort to help it better compete in the thick of the market.

In all, Sun came out with three new blade servers — its first blade servers that can utilise modern Intel Xeon processors, a blade for the UltraSparc TI "Niagara" processor, and a blade for AMD's Opteron processors — as well as a smaller blade-server chassis. Collectively, the products are known as the Sun Blade 6000 Modular System.

Although blades represent only a fraction of the overall server market, they are one of the faster growing segments. IBM and HP currently have a wide lead over other competitors in blades.

Sun's earlier blade chassis, the Sun Blade 8000, measured 19U, or 19 rack units, in height. That's 33.25 inches. The chassis accommodated Opteron-based blades and was optimised for four-processor servers. As a result, the Sun Blade 8000 was largely targeted to the upper end of the server market.

The 6000 is more versatile and aimed at the mainstream of the server market. It measures 10U, or 17.5 inches, tall. Four of the chassis can be inserted into a server rack. Each chassis holds up to 10 blades. Thus, a completely full server rack can hold 320 processor cores and 2.5TB of memory and can accommodate up to 5Tb of data per second of input/output.

Typically, customers will buy blade systems but not fill up the server racks and chassis at the start. Instead, they buy racks and fill them up gradually. Smaller racks that can accommodate a wider variety of equipment are an easier sell.

The blades that get inserted into the 6000 hold fewer processors, which makes the individual blades cheaper. The blades designed for Xeon and Opteron processors can hold two multicore processors each, while the Niagara blade can hold one eight-core chip.

Technically, a 6000 blade holds as many processor cores as an 8000 blade because the 6000 blades can hold either two four-core chips or one eight-core chip, while the 8000 is designed for four two-core chips. The 8000, however, will be upgraded.

The prices vary according to the processor. The Intel blade costs from £2,300 and the AMD blade costs the same. The Sun Sparc blade costs from £3,500. The chassis will cost from £3,000.

 

Sun Blade 6000
 
Sun's Blade 6000, unlike the Blade 8000, is aimed at the mainstream server market
 

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