Table 1, Intel architecture comparison – Dell PowerEdge R820 User Manual

Page 7

Advertising
background image

Performance Analysis of HPC Applications on Several Dell PowerEdge 12

th

Generation Servers

7

Intel architecture comparison

Table 1.

Intel Xeon
Processor 5600
Series

Intel Xeon
Processor E5-
2400 Product
Family

Intel Xeon
Processor E5-
2600 Product
Family

Intel Xeon
Processor E5-
4600 Product
Family

Architecture
Codename

Westmere–EP

Sandy Bridge-
EN

Sandy Bridge-EP

Sandy Bridge-EP
4S

Max Sockets / Cores
per socket

2/6

2/8

2/8

4/8

Memory channels

3 per socket

3 per socket

4 per socket

4 per socket

Max Memory speed

1333 MHz

1600 MHz

1600 MHz

1600 MHz

QPI links per CPU

2

1

2

2

Max QPI Speed

6.4 GT/s

8 GT/s

8 GT/s

8 GT/s

Max Processor TDP

130 W

95W

135W

130W

Max DIMMs Per
Channel (DPC)

3DPC

2 DPC

3 DPC

3 DPC

Dell PowerEdge
servers models

R610, R710,
M610

R420, R520,
M420

R620, R720,
M620

R820, M820

Figure 2 outlines the block diagram of the Sandy Bridge-EN platform architecture. Compared to the
Sandy Bridge-EP platform, the differences lie in the number of QPI links, the number of memory
channels and the number of DIMMs per channel. The EN based processors operate at a lower maximum
wattage compared to the EP based processors. InfiniBand FDR is not supported on the EN based
processers. In its place, InfiniBand FDR10 [2] is used. The EN processor is a balanced configuration in
terms of bandwidth. The processors can support a theoretical maximum of 32 GB/s through the QPI link
between the sockets and the theoretical maximum memory bandwidth from a socket to its memory is
38.4 GB/s.

Advertising
This manual is related to the following products: