UltraSPARC T2
Sun Microsystems' UltraSPARC T2 microprocessor is a multithreading, multi-core CPU. It is a member of the SPARC family, and the successor to the UltraSPARC T1. The chip is sometimes referred to by its codename, Niagara 2. Sun started selling servers with the T2 processor in October 2007. New featuresThe T2 is a commodity derivative of the UltraSPARC series of microprocessors, targeting Internet workloads in computers, storage and networking devices. The processor, manufactured in 65 nm, is available with eight CPU cores, and each core is able to handle eight threads concurrently. Thus the processor is capable of processing up to 64 concurrent threads. Other new features include:[1]
Core pipelineThere are 8 stages for integer operations, instead of 6 in the T1.
SystemsThe T2 processor can be found in the following products from Sun and Fujitsu Computer Systems:
Sun also licensed the T2 processor to Themis Computer, which introduced the first non-Sun T2-based servers in 2008:
UltraSPARC T2 PlusIn April 2008, Sun released servers based on the UltraSPARC T2 Plus processor, an SMP capable version of UltraSPARC T2.[3] Sun released the UltraSPARC T2 Plus processor with the following changes:
T2 Plus systemsUltraSPARC T2 Plus processors can be found in the following products from Sun and Fujitsu Computer Systems: Two-way SMP servers:
Four-way SMP server:
Compute clusterThe High Performance Computing Virtual Laboratory in Canada built a compute cluster using 78 Sun SPARC Enterprise T5140 servers. With two 1.2 GHz T2 Plus chips in each T5140 server, the cluster has close to 10,000 compute threads, making it ideal for high-throughput workloads.[4] VirtualizationLike the T1, the T2 supports the Hyper-Privileged execution mode. The SPARC Hypervisor runs in this mode and can partition a T2 system into 64 Logical Domains, and a two-way SMP T2 Plus system into 128 Logical Domains, each of which can run an independent operating system instance. Performance improvement versus T1The UltraSPARC T2 offers a variety of performance improvements over the former UltraSPARC T1 processor
Application tuningLeveraging the massive amount of thread-level parallelism (TLP) available on the CoolThreads platform can require different application development techniques than for traditional server platforms. Using TLP in applications is key to getting good performance. Sun has published a number of Sun BluePrints to assist application programmers in developing and deploying software on T1 or T2-based CoolThreads servers. The main article, Tuning Applications on UltraSPARC T1 Chip Multithreading Systems,[5] addresses issues for general application programmers. There is also a BluePrints article on using the Cryptographic Accelerator Units on the T1 and T2 processors.[6] Case studiesA wide range of applications were optimized on the CoolThreads platform, including Symantec Brightmail AntiSpam,[7] Oracle's Siebel applications,[8] and the Sun Java System Web Proxy Server.[9] Sun also documented its experience in moving its own online store onto a T2000 server cluster,[10] and have published two articles on web consolidation on CoolThreads using Solaris Containers.[11][12] Sun had an application performance tuning page for a range of open source applications, including MySQL, PHP, gzip, and ImageMagick.[13] Proper optimization for CoolThreads systems can result in significant gains: when the Sun Studio compiler is used with the recommended optimization settings, MySQL performance improves by 268% compared to using just the -O3 flag. Other UltraSPARC T2 performance related tunings are documented on Oracle engineers' blogs.[14] Power consumptionPeak power consumption can go as high as 123 watts, but the T2 typically consumes 95 watts during nominal system operation. This is up from 72 watts from the T1. Sun explains that this is due to a higher degree of system integration onto the chip. Release historyOn April 12, 2006, Sun announced the tape-out of the UltraSPARC T2.[15] Sun announced the T2's release on 7 August 2007, billing it as "the world's fastest microprocessor".[16] On April 9, 2008, Sun announced the UltraSPARC T2 Plus. Open designOn December 11, 2007, Sun made the UltraSPARC T2 processor design publicly available under the GNU General Public License via the OpenSPARC project. The release includes:
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