Intel's D5400XS: The Best Multi-GPU Motherboard?

Despite our rant about Fully Buffered DIMM, the D5400XS is actually a very impressive motherboard. It all starts with the fact that the D5400XS supports both SLI and Crossfire.

Don't be fooled, there's no technical reason why SLI can't work on all current Intel chipsets. NVIDIA's public argument for why it isn't enabled is because NVIDIA goes through a lot of internal testing to make sure that SLI works as best as possible with its own platforms, putting Intel platforms through the same tests isn't very high on NVIDIA's list of priorities.

The reality is that SLI is a very important brand to NVIDIA and simply giving away support just isn't going to happen. Intel and NVIDIA have never been able to come to terms on a licensing agreement to gain SLI support on Intel chipsets. It's not hard to understand why; if NVIDIA enabled SLI support on Intel chipsets, there would be absolutely no reason to buy NVIDIA based motherboards. With AMD already working against NVIDIA to make sure its own chipsets are the most desirable for its CPUs, it's not too hard to see why NVIDIA wants to hold onto the only reason to buy a nForce Intel chipset.

Because of the small production numbers however, Skulltrail makes the perfect platform for SLI support. There's still no licensing agreement in place, but the D5400XS motherboard uses two NVIDIA PCIe 1.1 bridges that each take 16 PCIe lanes coming off of the MCH and make two x16 slots out of them.


The two NVIDIA MCPs

There are four usable PCIe x16 slots on the motherboard, which should be able to support 2, 3 or 4 way CrossFire X down the road.

With NVIDIA silicon on board, the NVIDIA graphics drivers don't have to do anything funny to enable SLI support - it just works. It is worth noting that only 2-way SLI will work on the D5400XS, 3-way and 4-way configurations are not and never will be supported according to NVIDIA. After all, higher end SLI customers would be the target market for a Skulltrail system and you definitely don't want to make them too happy with an Intel chipset.

We ran a couple of quick tests to make sure that SLI scaling was on par with NVIDIA's own chipsets. The results were as expected, the D5400XS scales from one to two NVIDIA GPUs just as well as the nForce 780i:

CPU NVIDIA nForce 780i Intel Skulltrail D5400XS
1 x 8800 GT 34.3 35.4
2 x 8800 GT 65.0 67.0
Scaling 1.895x 1.893x

 

Now you can see why NVIDIA doesn't want to enable SLI on more Intel chipsets. It's odd that it has taken a high end, two socket enthusiast motherboard to become the ideal multi-GPU desktop platform but we'll take what we can get. We finally have a motherboard that doesn't tie your hands when it comes to graphics upgrade path. Kudos to Intel for making it happen, but it's a shame that we'll probably never see it on another motherboard.

Fully Buffered DIMM: An Unnecessary Requirement Skulltrail: Build your own Mac Pro?
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  • chizow - Monday, February 4, 2008 - link

    quote:

    we don't have a problem recommending it, assuming you are running applications that can take advantage of it. Even heavy multitasking won't stress all 8 cores, you really need the right applications to tame this beast.


    Not sure how you could come to that conclusion unless you posted some caveats like 1) you're getting it for free from Intel or 2)you're not paying for it yourself or have no concern about costs.

    Besides the staggering price tag associated with it ($500 + 2 x Xeon 9770 @$1300-1500 + FB-DIMM premium) there's some real concerns with how much benefit this set-up would yield over the best performing single socket solutions. In games, there's no support for Tri-SLI and beyond for NV parts although 3-4 cards may be an option with ATI. 3 seems more realistic as that last slot will be unusable with dual-cards.

    Then there's the actual benefit gained on a practical basis. In games, looks like its not even worth bothering with as you'd most likely see a bigger boost from buying another card for SLI or CrossFire. For everything else, they're highly input intensive apps, so you spend most of your work day preparing data to shave a few seconds off compute time so you can go to lunch 5 minutes sooner or catch an earlier train home.

    I guess in the end there's a place for products like this, to show off what's possible but recommending it without a few hundred caveats makes little sense to me.
  • chinaman1472 - Monday, February 4, 2008 - link

    The systems are made for an entirely different market, not the average consumer or the hardcore gamer.

    Shaving off a few minutes really adds up. You think people only compile or render one time per project? Big projects take time to finish, and if you can shave off 5 minutes every single time and have it happen across several computers, the thousands of dollars invested comes back. Time is money.
  • chizow - Monday, February 4, 2008 - link

    I didn't focus on real-world applications because the benefits are even less apparent. Save 4s on calculating time in Excel? Spend an hour formatting records/spreadsheets to save 4s...ya that's money well spent. The same is true for many real world applications. Sad reality is that for the same money you could buy 2-3x as many single-CPU rigs and in that case, gain more performance and productivity as a result.
  • Cygni - Monday, February 4, 2008 - link

    As we both noted, 'real world' isnt just Excel. Its also AutoCAD and 3dsmax. These are arenas where we arent talking about shaving 4 seconds, we are talking shaving whole minutes and in extreme cases even hours on renders.

    This isnt an office computer, this isnt a casual gamers machine. This is a serious workstation or extreme enthusiast rig, and you are going to pay the price premium to get it. Like I said, this is a CAD and 3D artists dream machine... not for your secretary to make phonetrees on. ;)

    In this arena? I cant think of any machines that are even close to it in performance.
  • chizow - Monday, February 4, 2008 - link

    Again, in both AutoCAD and 3DSMax, you'd be better served putting that extra money into another GPU or even workstation for a fraction of the cost. 2-3x the cost for uncertain increases over a single-CPU solution or a second/third workstation for the same price. But for a real world example, ILM said it took @24 hours or something ridiculous to render each Transformer frame. Say it took 24 hours with a single Quad Core with 2 x Quadro FX. Say Skulltrail cut that down to 18 or even 20 hours. Sure, nice improvement, but you'd still be better off with 2 or even 3 single CPU workstations for the same price. If it offered more GPU support and non-buffered DIMM support along with dual CPU support it might be worth it but it doesn't and actually offers less scalability than cheaper enthusiast chipsets for NV parts.
  • martin4wn - Tuesday, February 5, 2008 - link

    You're missing the point. Some people need all the performance they can get on one machine. Sure batch rendering a movie you just do each frame on a separate core and buy roomfulls of blade servers to run them on. But think of an individual artist on their own workstation. They are trying to get a perfect rendering of a scene. They are constantly tweaking attributes and re-rendering. They want all the power they can get in their own box - it's more efficient than trying to distribute it across a network. Other examples include stuff like particles or fluid simulations. They are done best on a single shared memory system where you can load the particles or fluid elements into a block of memory and let all the cores in your system loose on evaluating separate chunks of it.

    I write this sort of code for a living, and we have many customers buying up 8 core machines for individual artists doing exactly this kind of thing.
  • Chaotic42 - Tuesday, February 5, 2008 - link

    Anyone can come up with arbitrary workflows that don't use all of the power of this system. There are, however, some workflows which would use this system.

    I'm a cartographer, and I deal with huge amounts of data being processed at the same time. I have mapping program cutting imagery on one monitor, Photoshop performing image manipulation on a second, Illustrator doing TIFF separates on a third, and in the background I have four Excel tabs and enough IE tabs to choke a horse.

    Multiple systems makes no sense because you need so much extra hardware to run them (In the case of this system, two motherboards, two cases, etc) and you'll also need space to put the workstations (assuming you aren't using a KVM). You would also need to clog the network with your multi-gigabyte files to transfer them from one system to another for different processing.

    That seems a bit more of a hassle than a system like the one featured in the article.

  • Cygni - Monday, February 4, 2008 - link

    I dont see any problem with what he said there.

    All you talked about was gaming, but lets be honest here, this is not a system thats going to appeal to gamers, and this isnt a system setup for anyone with price concerns.

    In reality, this is a CAD/CAM dream machine, which is a market where $4-5,000 rigs are the low end. In the long run for even small design or production firms, 5 grand is absolute peanuts and WELL worth spending twice a year to have happy engineers banging away. The inclusion of SLI/Crossfire is going to move these things like hotcakes in this sector. There is nothing that will be able to touch it. And thats not even mentioning its uses for rendering...

    I guess what im saying is try to realize the world is a little bit bigger than gaming.
  • Knowname - Sunday, February 10, 2008 - link

    On that note, is there any studies on the gains you get in CAD applications by upgrading your videocard?? How much does the gpu really play in the process?? The only significant gain I can think of for CAD is quad desktop monitors per card with Matrox vid cards. I don't see how the GPU (beyond the RAMDAC or whatever it's called) really makes a difference. Pls tell me this, I keep wasting my money on ATI cards (not mention my G550 wich I like, but it wasn't worth the money I spent on it when I could have gotten a 6600gt...) just on the hunch they'd be better than nvidea due to the 2d filtering and such (not really a big deal now, but...)
  • HilbertSpace - Monday, February 4, 2008 - link

    A lot of the 5000 intel chipsets let you use riser cards for more memory slots. Is that possible with skully?

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