Monday, October 26th 2015
Oracle Dusts Off SPARC, Announces a Big SPARC CPU Development
Oracle, which inherited the SPARC CPU machine architecture from its big Sun Microsystems acquisition from way back in 2010, made its biggest SPARC-related announcement ever since. The company is developing a new multi-core SPARC processor, codenamed "M7." This chip, according to Oracle, will not only be in the same league as today's contemporary enterprise CPU architectures, but will also feature Oracle's on-chip optimizations, such as special on-chip firmware, that improves performance and security of applications.
A large, on-chip micro-code would work to ensure security of in-memory databases (the chip would feature an integrated memory controller), and hardware-accelerated compression/decompression of very large databases for near real-time analytics. The M7 is the first SPARC-based processor designed from the ground-up by Oracle, and it will go on sale later this week, as part of the company's new T-series and M-series servers. It will also be offered in upgrade kits for Oracle Supercluster, a high-density machine designed specifically for Oracle.
Source:
InfoWorld
A large, on-chip micro-code would work to ensure security of in-memory databases (the chip would feature an integrated memory controller), and hardware-accelerated compression/decompression of very large databases for near real-time analytics. The M7 is the first SPARC-based processor designed from the ground-up by Oracle, and it will go on sale later this week, as part of the company's new T-series and M-series servers. It will also be offered in upgrade kits for Oracle Supercluster, a high-density machine designed specifically for Oracle.
20 Comments on Oracle Dusts Off SPARC, Announces a Big SPARC CPU Development
We own.. Exadata(2), exalogic(2), big data, and zero data loss machines already.
The point is that Oracle's intent is to scale horizontally, which is incredibly important if you're going to be working with huge data sets that are being used a lot and often.
I also stand corrected, the T4 was 8c/64t. The T5 is 16c/128t.
Oracle seems to tout when and how the T5 can haul ass.
blogs.oracle.com/JeffV/entry/more_sparc_t5_performance_results
www.oracle.com/us/solutions/performance-scalability/sparc-t5-4-tpc-h-record-2065520.html
Now Oracle is clearly going to be biased towards themselves but, even outside Oracle, the T5 is being compared to the E7 series Xeons which we all know pushes the core count envelope by supporting (like the T5,) up to 8 CPUs in a single server.
www.enterprisetech.com/2014/02/21/stacking-xeon-e7-v2-chips-competition/
Simple point is that the T5 stacks up pretty well for what it is and that if a "T6" that contains more cores and performance improvements very well could be a powerful option for the server market. Not to say that it would be cheap but, it's not like E7s are cheap either. E5s can't compare because you're limited to 4 CPUs per server max and that's very dependent on which Xeons you have as some can only 2s and others can only do 1s.
Simply put, Oracle is a company that has resources to influence the market. People shouldn't forget that in the software market, Oracle is second only to Microsoft.
This is the best Intel has now:
ark.intel.com/products/84685/Intel-Xeon-Processor-E7-8890-v3-45M-Cache-2_50-GHz
18-core, 36 threads, 2.5 Ghz, 8-way, $7174.00 a pop.
The third link provides a much better comparison and, unless T6 really jumps ahead by leaps and bounds, it's going to have difficulty stealing business from Intel.
You're right that v2 didn't launch until Q1'14. v1 was the standard at the time so SPARC T5 was technically on top of a little while.
The thread title is quite misleading. Two years for a new architecture isn't bad. Actually, it's pretty good.
With respect to the title, it's has been some time since SPARC was revised and given how often new SPARCs used to get released, this was (in my opinion,) overdue. It has a little dust on it, sure, but it's not like we're hauling it out of the attic. :p
cant wait for m8....