After several months of previews and
sneak peeks, Intel has now launched its Xeon Quad-Core 5500-series server CPUs
based on Nehalem architecture and socket LGA 1366. Interestingly enough, the
company claims
that they are its most
revolutionary server processors since addressing the market with the Intel
Pentium Pro processor almost 15 years ago.
The Nehalem
Efficient-Platform offers the same raw processing capability of the groundbreaking
Core i7 processor family, with one slight change in the architecture. Rather
than having a single QPI link from the CPU to the IOH, the Xeon 5500-series
processors will have an additional QPI link for direct crosstalk between two
CPUs. This allows almost all applications to run faster, as the CPUs can
share Level 3 cache information and can access DDR3 memory information from one other. However, the pre-fetchers of a Core
i7 processor are optimized for consumer applications rather than server
processes, which means that a Nehalem CPU and a Nehalem-EP CPU clocked at the
same speeds will still perform slightly differently.
According to Intel, the new
enterprise-class chips can automatically adjust to specified energy usage
levels, speed data center transactions and customer database queries. Like Core
i7, the Xeon 5500-series supports Simultaneous Multi-Threading, formerly known
as Hyper-Threading. This technology allows the spare resources of each
execution unit to run a second parallel thread, resulting in a significant
performance boost in a number of growing applications.
"The Intel Xeon processor 5500 series is the
foundation for the next decade of innovation," said Patrick Gelsinger,
senior vice president and general manager of Intel's Digital Enterprise Group.
"These chips showcase groundbreaking advances in performance, virtualization
and workload management, which will create opportunities to solve the world's
most complex challenges and push the limits of science and technology."
Interestingly enough, the Xeon 5500-series
processors with two QPI links will in fact work on some Intel Core i7/X58
platform motherboards. Yet it is important to keep in mind that these boards
use standard, non-ECC unbuffered DDR3. A proper server motherboard for two or
more of these chips requires ECC registered DDR3.
Published in
PC Hardware
Intel launches Xeon 5500-series CPUs
Nehalem-EP now officially begins