AMD Opteron™ 6000 Series Platform with Direct Connect Architecture 2.0 Delivers More Cores, More Memory for Less Money1
Up to 119 Percent Improved Performance While Maintaining Low Price and Power2
SUNNYVALE, Calif.--(BUSINESS WIRE)--AMD (NYSE: AMD) announces availability of a new server platform featuring the world’s first 8- and 12-core x86 processor for the high-volume 2P and value 4P server market. The AMD Opteron™ 6000 Series platform addresses the unmistakable needs of server customers today - workload-specific performance, power efficiency, and overall value - while delivering more cores and more memory for less money.3 Leading OEMs including HP, Dell, Acer Group, Cray, and SGI are introducing new systems based on this highly scalable and reliable platform.
“As AMD has done before, we are again redefining the server market based on current customer requirements,” said Patrick Patla, vice president and general manager, Server and Embedded Divisions, AMD. “The AMD Opteron 6000 Series platform signals a new era of server value, significantly disrupts today’s server economics and provides the performance-per-watt, value and consistency customers demand for their real-world data center workloads.”
The new AMD Opteron 6000 Series platform features include:
- The industry’s only 8- and 12-core server processors performing at up to two times the level of AMD’s previous generation 6-core processors, including an 88 percent increase in integer performance4 and a 119 percent increase in floating point performance.2
- Enhanced integrated memory controller supporting four channels of DDR3 memory for up to a 2.5x improvement in overall memory bandwidth.5
- Thirty-three percent more memory channels per processor than competitive 2P solutions.6
- 50% higher DIMM capacity compared to previous generations, with up to 12 per processor, increasing the available memory overall and improving virtualization, database and HPC applications.
- AMD 5600 Series chipset with I/O virtualization capability, HyperTransport™ 3.0 technology and PCI Express® 2.0.
- Removal of the “4P tax”, since the same processors can be used in both 2P and 4P designs, and 4P-capable processors are now the same price as 2P-capable processors, bringing greatly improved value to the 4P space.
- Unprecedented price/performance. In a comparison between a best-performing 2P competitive platform versus a similar best-performing 4P AMD-based platform, customers can recognize up to double the performance and more than 10% lower total processor price.7
- Significant new power management features including a C1E power state to conserve energy when idle, the Advanced Platform Management Link allowing APML-enabled platforms to be remotely monitored for power and cooling, and AMD CoolSpeed technology, which automatically reduces p-states if a specified temperature limit is exceeded.
- A wide range of power and performance options with no compromise on the available feature sets.
- A legacy of consistency and stability. The new AMD Opteron platform is chipset- and socket- compatible between 2P and 4P and will be compatible with the planned processors based on the next-generation AMD server processor core, code-named “Bulldozer”.
Webcast
Join AMD for a media webcast on Monday, March 29, 2010 at 10:00 a.m. PDT and hear from a number of IT managers on their experiences with the AMD Opteron platform.
Additional Resources
- AMD@Work blog with guest posts from Acer Group, Cray, Dell, HP, and SGI
- AMD Opteron 6000 Series platform launch blog
- The AMD Opteron™ Express YouTube Channel
- AMD Opteron 6100 Series processor launch presentation
- AMD Opteron processor performance data
- Pricing information
- Photos
- Infrastructure and Channel support
- Online press kit
About AMD
Advanced Micro Devices (NYSE: AMD) is an innovative technology company dedicated to collaborating with customers and technology partners to ignite the next generation of computing and graphics solutions at work, home and play. For more information, visit http://www.amd.com.
AMD, the AMD Arrow logo, and AMD Opteron are trademarks of Advanced Micro Devices, Inc. Other names are for informational purposes only and may be trademarks of their respective owners.
SPEC, SPECint, and SPECfp are registered trademarks of the Standard Performance Evaluation Corporation. For the latest SPECfp®_rate2006 and SPECint®_rate2006 results, visit http://www.spec.org/cpu2006/results/.
¹ Based on comparison of median 1KU prices for complete AMD Opteron™ 6100 Series processor family ($744) vs. median of published 1KU prices for complete Intel Xeon 5600 Series processor family (“Westmere”) as of 3/23/10 ($996). See http://files.shareholder.com/downloads/INTC/874746611x0x357729/DEEBEE81-C386-4EB8-8D9D-F0EA06C57797/Mar_14_10_1ku_Price.pdf for details.
2 Based on comparison of Six-Core AMD Opteron™ processor Model 2435 (75W ACP; 2.6 GHz; $989 1KU price) vs. AMD Opteron™ processor Model 6174 (80W ACP; 2.2 GHz; $1165 planned 1KU price at launch) running SPECfp®_rate2006. Configuration: Supermicro A+ Server 1021M-UR+B server, 32GB (8x4GB DDR2-800) memory, Red Hat Enterprise Linux® Server release 5.3 64-bit; HP ProLiant DL165 G7 server, 64GB (16 x 4GB DDR3-1333) memory, Red Hat Enterprise Linux® 5 Update 4. The results for AMD Opteron™ processor Model 6174 are based upon data submitted to Standard Performance Evaluation Corporation as of March 17, 2010.
3 “More cores”: up to 12 cores for AMD Opteron™ 6100 Series processor vs. up to 6 cores for Intel Xeon “Westmere”. “More memory”: Up to 24 DIMMs with up to 256GB of main memory for AMD (2P) vs. up to 18 DIMM slots with up to 144 GB of main memory for Intel (2P). “Less money”: see footnote 1 above.
4 Based on comparison of Six-Core AMD Opteron™ processor Model 2435 (75W ACP; 2.6 GHz; $989 1KU price) vs. AMD Opteron™ processor Model 6174 (80W ACP; 2.2 GHz; $1165 planned 1KU price at launch) running SPECint®_rate2006. Configuration: Supermicro A+ Server 1021M-UR+B server, 32GB (8x4GB DDR2-800) memory, Red Hat Enterprise Linux® Server release 5.3 64-bit; HP ProLiant DL165 G7 server, 64GB (16 x 4GB DDR3-1333) memory, Red Hat Enterprise Linux® 5 Update 4. The results for AMD Opteron™ processor Model 6174 are based upon data submitted to Standard Performance Evaluation Corporation as of March 17, 2010.
5 STREAM memory bandwidth of 21GB/s for Six-Core AMD Opteron™ processor-based system vs. 55GB/s for AMD Opteron 6100 processor-based system. Configuration: 2 x Six-Core AMD Opteron™ processors Model 2435 in Supermicro H8DMU+ motherboard, 16GB (8 x 2GB DDR2-800) memory, SuSE Linux® Enterprise Server 10 SP2 64-bit; 2 x AMD Opteron™ processors Model 6174 in “Dinar” reference design kit, 32GB (8 x 4GB DDR3-1333) memory, SuSE Linux® Enterprise Server 11 64-bit.
6 Based on comparison of 4 memory channels for AMD Opteron™ 6100 Series processor vs. 3 memory channels for Intel Xeon processor codenamed “Westmere.” See http://www.anandtech.com/cpuchipsets/showdoc.aspx?i=3733.
7 Based on SPECfp®_rate2006 results published on www.amd.com/opteronperformance as of March 29, 2010. The other results stated above reflect results published on http://www.spec.org/cput2006/results as of March 17, 2010. 514 (est.) using 4 x AMD Opteron™ processor Model 6136 ($744 each) vs. 257 using 2 x Intel Xeon processor Model X5680 ($1633 each). The comparison presented above is based on the best performing four-socket servers using AMD Opteron™ processor Model 6174 and the best performing two-socket servers using Intel Xeon processor Models X5680. Pricing reflects 1KU tray pricing on www.amd.com and www.intel.com as of March 23, 2010.
Contacts
AMD Public Relations
Teresa Osborne, 512-633-8228
teresa.osborne@amd.com