AMD's Barcelona will enable datacentres to
double capacity without upgrading power supplies or cooling systems, the company
has said. It also includes hardware support to speed virtualisation, providing a
boost to server consolidation.
Due to ship in August as the Quad-Core Opteron, Barcelona has been designed
from the ground up for power efficiency, keeping the same power budget as AMD's
dual-core chips. This makes it an easy upgrade for boosting performance,
according to the firm.
"A large datacentre might upgrade from dual-core to quad, going from 8,000 to
16,000 cores total, without any change in power consumption or heat generated.
With the competition, you would have to depopulate some servers because you
would run out of power budget," said Felipe Payet, AMD manager for channel
market development.
AMD said its Rapid Virtualisation Indexing will boost virtualisation through
better hardware support. In particular, translation of virtual to physical
memory addresses can now be done in hardware instead of software such as
VMware.
"Early results show about a 40 percent performance improvement when using
virtualisation in Barcelona," said Steve Demski, AMD Server and Workstation
product manager.
In a recent report, analyst firm Gartner said it expected AMD's Barcelona
chip to take a leadership position in four-way servers, as Intel does not yet
have any product that can compete. However, the report said that this situation
may change in the near future once Intel introduces technology such as its CSI
interconnect that mirrors AMD's HyperTransport.
The first systems using Barcelona are expected in September, AMD said.
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