Server number 3: the Quanta QSCC-4R or SGI Altix UV 10

CPU Four Xeon X7560 at 2.26GHz
RAM 16 x 4GB Samsung 1333MHz CH9
Motherboard QCI QSSC-S4R 31S4RMB0000
Chipset Intel 7500
BIOS version QSSC-S4R.QCI.01.00.0026.04052010655
PSU 4 x Delta DPS-850FB A S3F E62433-004 850W

The 50kg 4U beast of Quanta that we reviewed a month ago is the representative of the quad Xeon 7500 platform. The interesting thing about this server is that the hardware is identical to the SGI Altix UV10. SGI confirms that the motherboard inside is designed by QSSC and Intel here. The pretty pictures here at SGI indeed show us an identical server.

Maximum expandability and scalability is the focus of this server: 10 PCIe slots, quad gigabit Ethernet onboard, and 64 DIMM slots. The disadvantage of the enormous amount of DIMM slots is the use of eight separate memory boards.


Click to enlarge

Each easily accessible memory board has two memory buffers. All these buffers require power, as shown by the heatsinks on top of them. The PSUs use a 2+2 configuration, but that is not necessarily a disadvantage. The PSU management logic is smart enough to make sure that the redundant PSUs do not waste any power at all: "Cold Redundancy".

The QSCC-4R server uses 130W TDP processors, but it is probably the best, albeit most expensive, choice for this server. The lower power 105W TDP Xeon E7540 only has six cores, less L3 cache (18MB), and runs at 2GHz. So it is definitely questionable whether the performance/watt of the E7540 is better compared to the Xeon X7560 which has 33% more cores and runs at a 10% higher clock.

HP Proliant DL380 G7 The Storage Setup
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  • JohanAnandtech - Friday, September 10, 2010 - link

    Thanks, appreciate you took the time to let us know. We went through 5 weeks of intensive testing and my eyes still hurt from looking at the countless excel sheets, with endless power and response time readings. ;-)
  • FourthLiver - Thursday, September 9, 2010 - link

    at the end of page 12, you allude to a performance per watt analysis. looks like you forgot to put it up. i'm chomping at the bit to see those numbers!

    please disregard me if i failed to rtfa correctly. Anandtech is the best; your (all of you collectively) articles are brilliant and correct down to the smallest details. This is another article that was an absolute joy to read. :]
  • JohanAnandtech - Thursday, September 9, 2010 - link

    Well you can't really calculate it, as it depends on the situation. On low load loads, the system that consumes the less, is the winner, on the condition that the response times stay low. But of course, if your systems are running at low load all time, there might be something wrong: you should have bought more RAM and consolidated more VMs per system.

    At higher loads, the power consumption at high load divided by the throughput (vApusmark) is close to the truth. But it is definitely not the performance/watt number for everyone

    It depends on your workloads. The more critical processing power (think response time SLA) is, the more the last mentioned calculation makes sense. The more we are talking about lots of lightly loaded VMs (like authentification servers, fileservers etc.), the more simply looking at the energy consumed at page 12 make sense.
  • mino - Thursday, September 9, 2010 - link

    First, congratulations to a great article !

    Now to the small ammount of mess in there:
    "the CPUs consume more than the ACP ratings that AMD mentions everywhere"

    1) Avegare CPU Power (ACP) is NOT supposed/marketed to represent 100% load power use
    Wikipedia: "The average CPU power (ACP), is a scheme to characterize power consumption of new central processing units under "average" daily usage..."

    2) 122W at the wall and 110W at the CPU ??? Are you telling us the PSU's are 95% along with VRM/power/fans at 95% efficiency ? (0.95*0.95*1.22=1.10)
    . Sorry to spoil the party but that is NOT the case. 122W at wall means 100W at CPU at the most realistically 95W.

    Otherwise a great work. Keep is up!
  • JohanAnandtech - Friday, September 10, 2010 - link

    "1) Avegare CPU Power (ACP) is NOT supposed/marketed to represent 100% load power use
    Wikipedia: "The average CPU power (ACP), is a scheme to characterize power consumption of new central processing units under "average" daily usage...""

    You are right. But what value does it have? As an admin I want to know what the maximum could be realistically (TDP is the absolute maximum for non-micro periods) and if you read between the lines that is more or less what AMD communicated (see their white paper). if it is purely "average", it has no meaning, because average power can be a quite a bit lower as some servers will run at 30% on average, others at 60%.

    These PSU are supposed to be 92-94% efficient and AFAIK the VRMs are at least 90% efficient. So 122 x 0.92 x 0.90 = 101 W.
  • mino - Saturday, September 11, 2010 - link

    Well, I was bit unslept when writing it but anyway. So got a bit harser than should have.

    In my experience the ACP values pretty well represent your average loaded server (<= 80% load). But that is not the point.

    AMD created ACP in a response to the fact that their TDP numbers are conservative while Intel's are optimistic. That was the main cause wery well known to you as well.

    Call me an ass but I certainly do not remember AT bitching about Intel TDPs no bein representative (during last 6 years at least).
    And we all know too well that those NEVER represented the real power use of their boxen nor did they EVER represented what the "TDP" moniker stands for.

    Currently the situation is as such that identical 2P AMD box with 80W ACP has ~ the same power requirements as 2P Intel box with 80W TDP. You have just proven that.

    Therefore I believe it would be fair to stop bitching about AMD (or Intel) cheating in marketing (both do) and just say whether the numbers are comparable or not.
    Arguing about spin wattage is not really needed.
  • JohanAnandtech - Monday, September 13, 2010 - link

    "Arguing about spin wattage is not really needed. "

    I have to disagree. The usual slogan is "don't look at TDP, look at measurements". What measurments? The totally unrealistic SPECpower numbers?

    It is impossible for review sites to test all CPUs. So it is up to vendors to gives us a number that does not have to be accurate on a few percent, but that let us select CPUs quickly.

    Customers should have one number that allows them to calculate worst case numbers which are realistic (heavily load webserver for example, not a thermal virus). So all CPU vendors should agree on a standard. That is not bitching, but is a real need of the sysadmins out there.
  • mino - Thursday, September 9, 2010 - link

    One thing I would love to see is having the lowest end HP server put to its paces.
    So far it seems to us a the best option for vCenter hosting in small environments (with FT Vm's hosting vCenter).

    Maybe even run 1-tile vAPUS (v1? perhaps) on it ?
  • m3rdpwr - Thursday, September 9, 2010 - link

    I would have prepared to have had the DL385 G7 compared.
    They can be had with 8 and 12 core CPU's.

    We have close to 200 HP servers of all models, rack and blades.
    Many running vm in our Data Center.

    -Mario
  • duploxxx - Friday, September 10, 2010 - link

    same here, we moved also to 385g7 with the new 8-12core cpu's, Nice servers with huge core count since we never run more vCPU then pCPU in a system. Dell 815 looks like a good solution also, it was mentioned in the review the BL685 and DL585 are way more expensive.

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