Xeon E Six Core Conclusion

The Xeon E family is actually a niche element to Intel’s portfolio. For the datacenter, when costs are amortized at scale, is usually becomes beneficial to invest in the big iron Xeon-SP processors to take advantage of more performance, more PCIe lanes, additional connectivity, and the support that OEMs provide. Xeon E ultimately ends up in commercial systems where some form of grunt is needed, but also where ECC is needed or an IT department is looking for strict control in a company-wide deployment. That said, there are a number of home users who may wish to invest in this platform for their personal setups.

Intel’s game here is features for money: the Xeon E parts do ECC and advanced management, some parts come with graphics, and this will tack on a few more dollars on to a system build. The only question is which processor to get, and how much will it cost.

The Xeon E family is currently split into six-core processors and four-core processors, varying mostly in frequency rather than power, with a couple of low-end processors without hyperthreading. All of the E-2100 parts come from Intel’s Coffee Lake microarchitecture, similar to Intel's 8th Gen Core processors, and in fact we’re pretty sure it’s the same silicon die with a few features in silicon enabled/disabled (as is usually the case). In this review, we tested most of the six-core offerings that should be available in the next few weeks.

Even on paper, there is not much to separate all the six-core offerings. The E-2126G starts at $255 tray price, with six cores and no hyperthreading, and it goes up to the E-2186G at $450 tray price with six cores, hyperthreading, and some more base frequency and turbo frequency. With all of the six core processors here varying from 3.3 GHz to 3.8 GHz base frequency and 4.5 GHz to 4.7 GHz turbo frequency, they should perform roughly the same.

And indeed in our testing this is what we find. I mean, these parts are so eerily similar to each other, the results form a super tight grouping, with run-to-run variation deciding which processor is going to take the top spot. The extra TDP of the E-2186G at 95W, rather than the 80W of the other processors, doesn’t mean much as these processors always go into a TDP limited mode.  

In this case, the recommendation is simple: get the E-2136 if integrated graphics isn’t needed, and the E-2146G if they are needed. These two Xeon E processors both hit the price/performance ratio by having the same practical performance as the top end E-2186G, but end up costing 33%+ less.

There is no real reason to recommend the E-2186G, unless you want to say you have the top Xeon E – and who really is going to boast about that?

Upgrading from Xeon E3-1200 v5

For this review, we were able to rustle up two of the top Xeon E3-1200 v5 parts for comparison. Back in the day, the E3-1280 v5 was the top end processor and was offered at a cool list price of $612, or the smarter option was the E3-1270 v5 for over $200 less for 100-200 MHz lower frequencies.

For users on the older v5 parts, an upgrade to the Xeon E family would mean a complete system refit: motherboard, CPU, and memory. This means that the upgrade cycle would need to offer a good deal of performance in order to be worthwhile. If we compare the E3-1275 v5 (without graphics) to our recommended E-2136, then the performance uplift is substantial.

With the E-2136, there are two additional cores to play with, as well as a much higher turbo frequency (the list price is also lower, for what it is worth, potentially lowering the Capex from the v5 upgrade). In our benchmarks, some of the quick tests saw a 10-20% speedup, while the larger throughput tests saw a 50-75% speedup, such as our compile test that saw the ability to process 70% more data in the same tie. Encoding was up 53%, rendering up 68%, emulation up 19%.

The only downside is that even though both processors are listed at 80W TDP, we measured the E3-1270 v5 at 63W peak power consumption, and the E3-2136 at 95W peak power. It’s a calculation to make: higher power costs for faster workflows.

For users that don’t need ECC, options will stem from the consumer line of processors. The Core i7-8700 family of processors also have six cores and twelve threads, but push the base frequency up higher, which also increases the power, and the price. However there are a larger number of motherboards to choose from, which maybe cheaper.

Unfortunately AMD hasn’t engaged us in testing their Ryzen Pro processor line, despite my requests, so it’s hard to get a read here on how they might fare based on the target markets. The six-core, twelve-thread Ryzen 5 2600X is the consumer version of the Ryzen 5 Pro 2600X, and costs $50 cheaper than the E-2136. The battle between the benchmarks can be close at times, however Intel tends to win most of the time by up to 10%. That might not be worth the $50, but it would be interesting to see these two processors in a head-to-head review.

Six Core Xeon E: Almost Identical Parts, So Buy The Cheap One

I’ve wanted to get to grips with the Xeon E/Xeon E3 family for a while. We managed to get in a set of v4/v5 processors a while back, but close to the v6 launch. Unfortunately Intel never sampled the v6. This time around we took the initiative for alternative sourcing, and the goods look good – in fact when you pair all the six-core parts together, it’s a bowl of identical fruit with different price stickers.

Intel’s strategy is a little odd here, announcing the Xeon E parts in July but then having a review embargo in November. While there have been parts listed at retailers, none have actually ever been in stock, with no ETAs. Technically today is a ‘secondary announcement’ around server deployment for Xeon E, although given the lack of retail availability, this is probably more like the ‘real’ launch than the July announcement was.

With the launch being today, there is perhaps a question if this has anything to do with Intel’s recent increase in demand for its server platform, which puts pressure on Intel’s manufacturing resources, to be unable to make enough Xeon E parts. Xeon E is a small part of the Xeon business after all. That being said, Intel still has strong demand for the Xeon-SP parts, which doesn’t look like it is subsiding with reports that it might be unable to fill sales orders. As a result, I wonder what bar has been reached in the manufacturing process that has enabled a sufficient quantity (whatever that means) of Xeon E to be made available.

There’s actually a funny story here: after hearing nothing from Intel about Xeon E since July, without prompting, two users in the last week emailed me about the availability of Xeon E. Sorry to the both of you, I couldn’t say anything due to NDAs. But kudos on timing! I hope they hit retail soon for the readers that are interested in getting their hands on them. In the meantime, I’ll try and rustle up some v6 parts for a generational comparison.

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  • GTVic - Monday, November 5, 2018 - link

    I'm wondering what is the status on the W-Series. Seems like no update/launches for over 1 year?
  • CallumS - Monday, November 5, 2018 - link

    These look great for SMB finance/inventory management/ERP applications where low latency and high single thread performance is often most beneficial. Or where software is licensed per core. Particularly if they are available within servers with OK remote management functionality at decent price points. I'd love to be able to recommend 3 or 4 of them, and the presumably upcoming 8 core configuration when it is are available, in 1U servers to SMBs rather than Xeon-SP configurations.

    The Intel Xeon-SP configurations are obviously still going to be the best performing and value for a lot of large enterprise/scale workloads but for smaller organisations and applications only used by under a 100 users, having the simplicity (i.e. no NUMA configuration/consideration requirements) and the performance benefits of a leaner configuration would be great. Plus, having 3 or 4 identical servers with SSD drives in RAID1 could dramatically simplify and improve a lot of local hardware related DR capabilities for organisations with moderate budgets and requirements (essentially an unplug of production SSD drives and move to another/test server).

    From a market competition perspective, unfortunately it doesn't look like there is any other decent options for entry level server usage at this price at the moment. The AMD EPYC platform and CPUs are too expensive and at too lower clock speeds for a lot of business applications requiring quick response times/low latency and or licensing per core. And while AMD Ryzen CPUs are great for desktops, particularly where a dedicated GPU was already going to be required, this is actually one area where the Intel solutions can often end up cheaper and better when factoring platform costs - while also having far better support and availability. Therefore, it's really just Intel competing with themselves at the moment and enticing businesses to upgrade/invest. While not hopeful, it would be great if AMD and partners could change this.

    Given that an 8700k in one of my desktops is already quicker than a lot of the 12 to 16 core Intel Xeon-SP configurations that we've also used, even for heavy load tests, due to frequency, latency, and IPC benefits, I'm really looking forward to these CPUs, and the 8 core version, hitting the market. Just the saving in per core licensing costs would probably make it cheaper to buy new servers with these CPUs than to configure new VMs on existing Xeon-SP servers for new setups.
  • Cooe - Tuesday, November 6, 2018 - link

    Uhh... You seem to have entirely forgotten that X399 & Ryzen Threadripper exist. Plenty good single-core performance, but absolutely barnstorming multi-core for the price, ECC support, AND 64x PCIe 3.0 lanes.
  • CallumS - Tuesday, November 6, 2018 - link

    Agreed about Ryzen Threadripper CPUs being great for multi-threaded workloads and also having pretty good single core performance. I didn't forget, it's what will likely be in my next workstation, I just didn't go into that detail for the purpose of brevity.

    For production server purposes, atleast a basic remote management interface and support from the major vendors is generally required, though. If we could get a Ryzen Threadripper 2950X or equivalent EPYC CPU with similar frequencies in a 1RU chasis from a major vendor with decent support and management interfaces at a good price, we'd be all over it. Perhaps with the new Zen 2 EPYC CPUs about to be announced, AMD will offer something like it. I certainly hope so.
  • Spunjji - Tuesday, November 6, 2018 - link

    It has nothing to do with what AMD are offering, unfortunately, and everything to do with what system integrators are prepared to put out there. As long as Intel is filling their pockets with plenty of MDF then I wouldn't expect to see anything soon. Hell, HP even took the iLO out of their MicroServer when they switched back to using AMD CPUs because "reasons".
  • CallumS - Tuesday, November 6, 2018 - link

    I think that it's far more likely to be a combination. System integrators still require support from manufacturers/vendors for the products/solutions that they are selling. And both AMD and Intel definitely put in mechanisms/differences to protect product lines/profit. It's not like the major vendors aren't selling EPYC systems now. A new EPYC SKU by AMD with 2950X like performance would in itself provide us with the option for a higher frequency server/EPYC CPU. Given the TDP of the Epyc 7601, it should be quite easy and practical to do from engineering and manufacturing perspectives. Or, alternatively, it should be easy enough for AMD to provide capabilities for, and to encourage, board partners to release 'server' orientated Threadripper boards. Either of which I'd love to see - but would still much prefer higher frequency EPYC SKUs due to memory and platform advantages - particularly with major system integrators already having validated EPYC server platforms.
  • Dusk_Star - Monday, November 5, 2018 - link

    Corsair Ballistix
    4x4GB
    DDR4-2666

    I feel like this should be *Crucial Ballistix* to match the rest of the "Test Setup" table.
  • watersb - Tuesday, November 6, 2018 - link

    Awesome review, many thanks.

    I usually build my systems with ECC DRAM, whenever possible, but that has become a huge pain point over the past few generations.

    I prefer to hear the news on these parts from AnandTech. ServeTheHome is fantastic, but nothing but $10,000+ systems gets a bit discouraging.
  • mkaibear - Tuesday, November 6, 2018 - link

    Can I just say how much the header text (EEEEEEEE) made me laugh?

    Not sure why, think it just appealed to my inner surrealist.

    Cheers!
  • CyrIng - Thursday, November 8, 2018 - link

    Nice review and thanks for the Chromium results but those are professional processors which to my pov will also be employed in Linux/BSD/database/backend frameworks and so on where games don't really matter.

    For example, x86 and arm cross compilations such as buildroot would be great to read.

    As an engineer Windows is out of the scope

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