Intel Aims Xeon at Data Centers

The new multi-core SoCs are designed to help accelerate data center communications, all in the service of network virtualization.

Brian Santo, Senior editor, Test & Measurement / Components, Light Reading

November 10, 2015

3 Min Read
Intel Aims Xeon at Data Centers

Intel is expanding its Xeon processor D-1500 family of SoCs with new variants designed to accelerate server, storage and network applications. Intel also unveiled two new Ethernet controllers aimed at a data center applications.

Intel Corp. (Nasdaq: INTC) expects all of the system-on-a-chip (SoC) products to help pave the way for NFV.

The company introduced the products in a webcast punctuated by constant buffering timeouts. Sandra Rivera, vice president of Intel's Data Center Group, was the host of the video.

Verizon Communications Inc. (NYSE: VZ) is working with Intel on virtualizing aspects of its network with an eye on an eventual upgrade to 5G wireless. Verizon is using virtualization to perform what it calls network slicing -- creating "slices" of bandwidth for usages based on the application.

SK Telecom (Nasdaq: SKM), meanwhile, is looking at consumer applications that might include smart glasses for augmented or immersive reality. That will require a network that is much more intelligent, much more scalable, and much more flexible. Rivera said that applications such as these are providing impetus to the growing interest in SDN and NFV globally.

Intel added eight new members to the Xeon D-1500 family of SoCs; they range from four cores to eight cores. The company said that in the first quarter, it will extend the family again with another set of SoCs with either 12 or 16 cores.

The new SoCs exceed most performance parameters of Intel's own Atom processors by anywhere from 2x to 5x, and outperform earlier Xeon implementations in most metrics by at least half again.

Want to know more about comms chips? Check out our dedicated comms chips content channel here on Light Reading.

Systems based on the new chips should draw less power and be faster, which Intel argues justifies moving them closer to the edge. In routing applications, network operators can push intelligence (including firewalls) closer to the edge; in storage applications, they can push cache closer to customers.

Intel's Ethernet Multi-host Controller FM10000 family is designed for data center and communications network architectures, with features to support NFV. The goal is to accelerate network traffic within and between servers with processing speeds of up to 960 million packets per second and up to 200 Gbit/s of bandwidth.

The Ethernet Controller X550 family provides low-power 10GigE connectivity, also for data center applications, including high-performance storage, network appliance, storage attached network (SAN), network firewall and virtual private network solutions, the company said. The controller offers two 10GigE ports in a single controller and provides flexible I/O virtualization for port partitioning and quality of service (QoS).

Intel also called out its ongoing partnership with Red Hat Inc. (NYSE: RHT), noting that the two have been integrating their respective products, working together to optimize their joint NFV and SDN products, and expanding the number of innovation centers where they jointly sponsor plugfests and hackathons as vehicles for encouraging product interoperability.

— Brian Santo, Senior Editor, Components, T&M, Light Reading

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About the Author

Brian Santo

Senior editor, Test & Measurement / Components, Light Reading

Santo joined Light Reading on September 14, 2015, with a mission to turn the test & measurement and components sectors upside down and then see what falls out, photograph the debris and then write about it in a manner befitting his vast experience. That experience includes more than nine years at video and broadband industry publication CED, where he was editor-in-chief until May 2015. He previously worked as an analyst at SNL Kagan, as Technology Editor of Cable World and held various editorial roles at Electronic Engineering Times, IEEE Spectrum and Electronic News. Santo has also made and sold bedroom furniture, which is not directly relevant to his role at Light Reading but which has already earned him the nickname 'Cribmaster.'

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