Socket-F System
The Socket-F system has two 2.6GHz (2218) processors mounted on a Tyan S3992 main board, with 8x1GB of DDR2-667 OEM memory. Internal cooling consists of five 3.5" fans and two CPU fans. Internal storage is provided by two WD1600YD hard drives configured in RAID 0, which is where the OS is installed.

Opteron 285 System
The Opteron 285 system consisted of a Tyan S2891 motherboard and 8 x 1GB of PC3200 DDR memory. We powered the 285 out of the Socket-F case, to keep the power measurements accurate. Internal cooling was identical to the Socket-F system, as the motherboard was placed inside the Socket-F system. The internal drives from the Socket-F were also used, to keep the measurements identical.

Woodcrest System
The Woodcrest system is configured with two 3.0GHz Xeon 5160 processors, seated in a SuperMicro X7DBE+. We also swapped out the processors and tested with two Xeon 5150 (2.66GHz) CPUs to provide a second reference point. The Woodcrest system is outfitted with 8x1GB 667 MHz OEM FB-DIMMS. Internal cooling consists of five 3.5" fans, with plastic ducting directing airflow across the CPUs and FB-DIMMs (shown below). Internal storage once again comes from two WD1600YD hard drives configured in RAID 0 with the OS installed.


Socket-F Server

Woodcrest Server
Click to enlarge

RAID Storage
LSI Logic 8480E MegaRaid Controller
Promise VTRAK J300s SAS Chassis
12 x 146GB Fujitsu 15,000 RPM SAS Drives configured in RAID 0

Operating System/Software
Windows 2003 Enterprise SP1 x64
SQL 2005 Enterprise x64

Test Client
Dual Opteron 285 with 8GB of memory.

Index Benchmark Methodology
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  • yyrkoon - Monday, December 18, 2006 - link

    quote:

    Some might wonder if a different - read Intel - motherboard for the Woodcrest system could have significantly altered the outcome of these tests


    After reading about FB-DIMMS, and the direct comparison to DDR2, I can not help but wonder, IF it were possible to use these Xeons with standard off the shelf DDR2, how well the Xeons would compare. Maybe this correlates with the quoted text above from your article, I do not know, as I don't know a lot about server grade equipment. Well, at least not "cutting edge" server equipment.
  • JarredWalton - Monday, December 18, 2006 - link

    FB-DIMMs definitely use more power, and there's technically nothing to prevent someone from making a dual socket Xeon board that uses DDR2 or even DDR (or DDR3, etc.) instead of FB-DIMMs. However, for now Intel has decided that FB-DIMM DDR2 is the way they're going for workstation/server platforms, so all we can do is wonder "what if...?"
  • Furen - Monday, December 18, 2006 - link

    Huh? As I understand it there IS a difference. The FB memory controller is different and the pin configuration is significantly different, as half the pins connect to the memory controller, the other half connect to the next DIMM on the same channel. Then there's also the fact that having quad-channel DDR2 would require an insane amount of traces while quad-channel FB requires roughly the same amount of traces.
  • yyrkoon - Tuesday, December 19, 2006 - link

    Speed / power difference, silly . . .
  • mino - Monday, December 18, 2006 - link

    What has the memory controller to do with the possibility of sticking 2 Woodcrests on DDR2 chipset ???
    The only thing to play is the FSB compatibility.

    BTW, NVIDIA is stepping in so such a platform is pretty much possible in 2007. SLI Quadro anyone...
  • joex444 - Monday, December 18, 2006 - link

    Interesting, not what you mom said last night. Oh, who got pwned?
  • glennpratt - Monday, December 18, 2006 - link

    He didn't say there isn't a difference, did he?
  • ltcommanderdata - Monday, December 18, 2006 - link

    I guess AMD is encouraging many sites to do this heads on comparison since Tech Report has one too with similar systems. They swapped in a pair of 2.67GHz X5355 Clovertons too which was interesting. It's good that you put in a pair of E5150s though since that's probably more comparable to the 2nd from the top 2.6GHz 2218s that AMD provided.

    What I would love to see is data points for the top of the line 2.8GHz 2220SE, to see if the power numbers are actually that much worse, and a 2.4GHz 2216HE to see if the power numbers are that much better. I'd also be interested in seeing a pair of 2.33GHz 5148 Woodcrests reviewed since I haven't seen anyone look to see how much better the LV chips are compared to regular 65W and 80W Woodcrests.

    It may not be that fair a comparison, but inclusion of the 2.67GHz X5355 Cloverton like Tech Report did would also be informative. Although, data for the 2.33Ghz E5345 Cloverton is probably more important since it still offers a 1333MHz FSB while keeping a 80W TDP of the lower parts, theoretically putting it in the sweet spot for performance/watt.

    It should probably be pointed out too that Tech Report also tried a 4x2GB configuration for the FB-DIMMs and they found they saved 22W or something, compared to a 8x1GB configuration. That's something to note for system configurators and leaves more room for future expansion too.

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