Intel on Thursday unveiled a new generation of Itanium processors for mission-critical data center installations alongside partners like Hewlett-Packard, NEC, Hitachi, France-based Bull, and China's Inspur, which are already building systems based on the new Itanium 9500 series chips.
Formerly codenamed Poulson, Intel's latest Itanium
series succeeds the "Tukwila" generation of Itanium processors. It is
being billed as a platform tailor-made for consolidating legacy RISC and
mainframe infrastructure and computing in a dedicated system capable of
handling mission-critical computing in increasingly cloud-centric data
centers.
"In a world where businesses are
increasingly dependent on IT for their competitive advantage, more and
more business applications are rightfully called 'mission critical' —
they must be always available, highly responsive and extremely
reliable," Intel Datacenter and Connected Systems Group general manager
Diane Bryant said in a statement. "It's for precisely these computing
workloads that we've developed the Intel Itanium 9500 processor."
At a press conference in San Francisco,
Intel executives outlined an Itanium roadmap they dubbed the "Modular
Development Model," which "enables deeper commonality between Intel
Itanium and the Intel Xeon processor E7 family."
That narrative raises certain questions
about Intel's plans for the Itanium architecture in light of recent
rumors and allegations that the chip giant isn't entirely committed to
it. Over the summer, Oracle was ordered by a California judge to
continue developing software for HP's Itanium-based products despite the
database giant's claim that Intel intended to discontinue its Itanium
product line.
The launch of Poulson and Intel's pledge
to release a follow-up code named Kittson appears to contradict
Oracle's contention and at the San Francisco event, Intel exec Rory
McInerny stated bluntly that Intel is as committed as ever to the
product line and its future.
Still, the talk of a convergence between
Itanium and Xeon begs the question—the Itanium brand may be around for
quite some time, but in a few years will the architecture itself be more
x86-like than the unique platform it is today?
Whatever the case, McInerny promised
that the new Itanium 9500 series "promises a leap in enterprise
performance, the strong Itanium ecosystem, and a solid path to the
future."
Serving 'Big Data' Customers
He stressed what he described as an increasing need for that convergence between UNIX-supporting platforms like Itanium and the x86-based systems that currently handle the bulk of cloud computing functionality in the data center, particularly for the so-called Big Data customers of companies like HP and other key Intel partners.
He stressed what he described as an increasing need for that convergence between UNIX-supporting platforms like Itanium and the x86-based systems that currently handle the bulk of cloud computing functionality in the data center, particularly for the so-called Big Data customers of companies like HP and other key Intel partners.
Intel's "common platform strategy" going
forward naturally combines Itanium with its own x86-based Xeon server
chips. McInerny said certain key features on either platform are being
transferred to the other despite the different architectures. For
example, the Itanium 9500 series now has Intel's Cache Safe
technology—which enables the CPU to detect when bits fail in memory
during the life of the product and avoids accessing those bits in its
processes—a feature that first appeared on Xeon.
Poulson offers some impressive
advantages over the older Tukwila generation of Itanium parts. A new
microarchitecture offers double the cores and throughput of the previous
generation chips, core frequency has been bumped up to 2.53GHz, and TDP
has been lowered by 8 percent while the idle power draw has been
slashed by a whopping 80 percent.
Those improvements add up to as much as
2.4 times the performance as compared with the older Itaniums, McInerny
said, as well as up to 40 percent faster frequency, and 33 percent
greater bandwidth.
The Intel exec also noted that parallelism on Poulson extends to the thread, core, memory, and instruction levels.
Meanwhile, Itanium's improved
Reliability, Availability, and Serviceability (RAS) safeguards for
mission-critical computing like Instruction Replay, End-to-End Error
Detection, and Cache Safe were key additions cited by hardware partners
Inspur and HP as drivers of their decisions to quickly develop
Poulson-based products.
"We considered the RAS feature first.
These systems run very critical transactions and we must find a way for
our customer to feel very comfortable with the system and the platform,"
said Inspur CTO Hu Leijun, whose company is offering the Itanium-based
K1 System, featuring support for 32 Poulson CPUs and 4TB of memory.
HP said it's basing its next generation
of mission-critical Converged Infrastructure products around the new
Itanium 9500 processors, which it said will enhance its Integrity
platforms supporting the HP-UX, HP NonStop, and OpenVMS operating
systems.
The company said its new Poulson-based
products include a "faster, more robust" HP Superdome 2 server featuring
new blades, three new HP Integrity server blades for the HP BladeSystem
c-Class enclosure (pictured above), and a new entry-class HP Integrity
server "for branch offices or expanding businesses that is ENERGY
STAR-certified for reduced energy use," as well as security and
management improvements made to the company's HP-UX





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