Intel Announces Scalable Platform Family, Skylake
Intel is reorganizing its enterprise CPU branding from the traditional Xeon E5 and E7 SKUs into a new Xeon Processor Scalable family that is stratifie…
Intel Announces Scalable Platform Family, Skylake
Intel is reorganizing its enterprise CPU branding from the traditional Xeon E5 and E7 SKUs into a new Xeon Processor Scalable family that is stratifie…
Intel is reorganizing its enterprise CPU branding from the traditional Xeon E5 and E7 SKUs into a new Xeon Processor Scalable family that is stratified into Platinum, Gold, Silver, and Bronze tiers. The transition comes prior to Intel’s looming release of the new Skylake-SP lineup (another change from the previous -EP branding).
Lisa Spelman, Intel’s vice president and general manager of Xeon products, penned an editorial outlining a few features of the new servers, which promise to offer up to 3.9x more virtualization workload scalability compared to four-year-old server platforms. Spelman also mentioned a new Volume Management Device (VMD), which Intel designed to improve management of the company’s latest SSDs, such as the 3D XPoint-powered Intel DC P4800X we recently tested and the recently-announced DC P4600 series. It also allows for hot-plugging.
Intel’s E7 family (four- to eight-socket) now falls into the Gold category, while the E5 family (two- to four-socket) slots into the Silver category. Intel will add as-yet undefined products into the upper and lower tiers in the future. Intel didn’t release specifications for the new Skylake-SP models but listed integrated QuickAssist (QAT) AVX-512 accelerators, new on-die interconnects, and memory controller as key features. Intel also lists FPGAs, Nervana (ASICs), Xeon Phi, and silicon photonics as complimentary platform features.
Hot-plugging 2.5″ NVMe SSDs isn’t a new feature, so it will be interesting to see Intel’s spin on the new management device. We do know that the latest Intel data center SSDs have improved NVMe-MI management features, as well as out-of-band management capabilities, which is integral for simplified management of large SSD deployments.
At Computex 2016 we spotted the massive LGA3647 socket that Intel employs for the Purley (aka Skylake) Xeons. Intel also employs the same socket for its Knights Landing products. The extra pin allotment supports a hefty allotment of new features, such as 100Gbps Omni-Path networking connectivity. Intel has also demonstrated on-die FPGAs in the past, which might work its way into the platform as well.
Spelman noted that the company is launching the Xeon Processor Scalable family this summer, so we expect more details soon.