Powerful IntelÆ XeonÆ Processor E5-2600 v2 Product Family Delivers More Computing, Flexibility for Next Generation of Datacenters
NEWS HIGHLIGHTS
- Launched today, IntelÆ XeonÆ Processor E5-2600 v2 product family offers up to 45 percent greater efficiency and up to 50 percent more performance compared to the previous generation.
- New family of 22 nm processors ideally suited for high performance computing, cloud and enterprise segments, and offer compelling new opportunities for telecommunications.
- Amazon Web Services* becomes first cloud service provider to use the “Intel InsideÆ” brand, letting its customers know that the services it provides utilize Intel technology.
INTEL DEVELOPER FORUM, SAN FRANCISCO, September 10, 2013 – Intel Corporation today introduced the IntelÆ XeonÆ Processor E5-2600 v2 product family (code named “Ivy Bridge-EP”), an industry-leading set of versatile processors that promises to redefine the server, storage and networking infrastructure found in datacenters. With greater efficiency and flexibility, these processors will enable the rapid delivery of services for high performance computing, cloud and enterprise segments, and offer compelling new opportunities for telecommunications vendors.
The new Xeon product family is based on Intel’s leading 22-nanometer process technology, contributing to dramatic energy efficiency improvements of up to 451 percent when compared to the previous generation. The processor family also features up to 12 cores and delivers up to 50 percent more performance2 across variety of compute intensive workloads.
“More than ever, organizations are looking to information technology to transform their businesses,” said Diane Bryant, senior vice president and general manager of the Datacenter and Connected Systems Group at Intel. “Offering new cloud-based services requires an infrastructure that is versatile enough to support the diverse workloads and is flexible enough to respond to changes in resource demand across servers, storage and network.”
Much of the infrastructure today is not architected to support the growth in IT services. Datacenter management is often manual and static. To enable on-demand, automated services, the next generation of datacenters will need to evolve to a “software defined infrastructure” where many of the functions are managed in software. The new Intel Xeon processors provide a common, software compatible processing foundation and possess the features and tools to help transform datacenters for the future.
New, Powerful Engine for Agile, Efficient Datacenter The Intel Xeon processor E5-2600 v2 product family is Intel’s most versatile processing technology and can address many of the constraints datacenters face today. It allows the industry to innovate and build solutions for a wide variety of datacenter workloads to meet diverse customer needs.
The Intel Xeon processors E5-2600 v2 product family will power the new IBM* NeXtScale System, a high-density, flexible computing platform designed for high-demand workloads such as analytics, technical computing and cloud delivery. Intel’s newest processor family also will be used in IBM’s new x3650 M4 HD high-density storage server, ideal for managing big data and business-critical workloads, as well as all of IBM’s two-socket systems including System x racks and towers, Flex System, iDataPlex, and BladeCenter offerings.
Re-defining Networking, StorageData traffic generated by connected mobile devices and the associated services is expected to have a 66 percent3 compound annual growth rate over the next four years. This puts additional pressure on networking infrastructure to be more agile and efficient to allow for much faster provisioning of services.
Today, network configuration requires manual set-up by skilled IT staff and it may take up to two or three weeks to deploy required networking resources to support new applications and services. Intel Xeon processor E5-2600 v2 product family accelerates efficient processing of network workloads commonly handled by expensive and proprietary offload engines and accelerators found in networking appliances.
Using Intel’s Open Network Platform (ONP) server reference design, customers can use high-volume Xeon-based servers combined with industry open standards to consolidate virtualized networking applications. This allows them to deliver market leading throughput performance and latency for Software Defined Networking (SDN) and Network Function Virtualization (NFV) workloads. Intel’s ONP server reference design is based on the Wind River Open Virtualization Profile and the Intel Data Plane Development Kit Accelerated Open vSwitch.
HP* is an ecosystem partner for Intel’s ONP server and switch reference design. “Organizations are looking for more open, industry standard technology to support complex IT demands, whether they are cloud based-applications, support for virtualized environments or for replacing expensive appliances, such as firewalls, VPNs, and edge routers,” said Werner Schaefer, vice president of Market and Business Development, HP Servers. “These reference designs with innovative HP ProLiant Gen8 Servers and HP Networking solutions allow customers to consolidate networking workloads, reduce deployment costs and shorten provisioning time.”
Eighty-two percent4 of global telecommunications providers are expected to evaluate SDN and NFV this year to find the ways to reduce their costs and increase flexibility in dynamic resource provisioning.
To assist in accelerating the deployment of software defined infrastructures, Intel also announced IntelÆ Network Builders ecosystem. The program allows ecosystem partners to take advantage of Intel’s reference architecture platforms to accelerate SDN and NFV deployments. With more than 20 leading technology companies contributing, Intel’s partners will be able to access a comprehensive reference architecture library of proven solutions to build and optimize software-defined infrastructure based on today’s telecommunications, cloud, and enterprise datacenter requirements.
The Intel Xeon processor E5-2600 v2 product family is also designed to power cost efficient scale-out, distributed, and software defined storage. From 2012 to 2020 the amount of stored data will double every two years5, reaching 40ZB. Fast, on-demand access to this amount of data for tasks such as big data analytics require more intelligent compute and storage intensive solutions, as well as a dramatic decrease in the cost-per-stored terabyte.
Dell* has selected the new processors for its upcoming storage solution. “The Intel Xeon processor E5 v2 family provides a great hardware base for Dell’s high performance, innovative solutions like our PowerEdge VRTX and intelligent tiered Compellent storage solutions,” said Forrest Norrod, vice president and general manager of Dell Server Solutions.
Amazon Web Services: Intel InsideÆ the InstanceAmazon Web Services (AWS) announced a new agreement with Intel that covers both a technology and a marketing collaboration. The marketing collaboration includes for the first time the use of the “Intel Inside” brand, letting AWS customers know that the services it provides are utilizing Intel technologies.
AWS instances that exclusively use Intel Xeon processors – intended for basic to performance-intensive use cases – now display the brand. Use of the recognizable logo will communicate the performance, quality, and security benefits available to end customers. AWS is also adding the latest Xeon processor family to its datacenters with services available for customers later this year.
Extensive Industry SupportStarting today, system manufacturers from around the world are expected to announce hundreds of IntelÆ XeonÆ processor E5 family-based platforms. These manufacturers include Acer*, Apple*, Asus*, Bull*, Cray* Cisco*, Dell*, Fujitsu*, HP*, Hitachi*, Huawei*, IBM*, Inspur*, Lenovo*, NEC*, Oracle*, Quanta*, SGI*, Sugon*, Supermicro*, TYAN*, Wiwynn* and Unisys*.
Pricing and AvailabilityThe Xeon processor E5-2600 v2 product family will be offered with 18 different parts which range in price from $202 to $2,614 in quantities of 1,000. Additionally three single-socket Intel Xeon processor E5-1600 parts will be offered for workstations which range in price from $294 to $1080.
Complete pricing details can be found in the http://intc.com/priceList.cfm. For more details on these new Intel Xeon processors, visit www.intel.com/xeon. For more details on world records and other claims, visit www.intel.com/performance/
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Software and workloads used in performance tests may have been optimized for performance only on Intel microprocessors. Performance tests, such as SYSmark and MobileMark, are measured using specific computer systems, components, software, operations and functions. Any change to any of those factors may cause the results to vary. You should consult other information and performance tests to assist you in fully evaluating your contemplated purchases, including the performance of that product when combined with other products. For more information go to http://www.intel.com/performance Intel does not control or audit the design or implementation of third party benchmark data or Web sites referenced in this document. Intel encourages all of its customers to visit the referenced Web sites or others where similar performance benchmark data are reported and confirm whether the referenced benchmark data are accurate and reflect performance of systems available for purchase.
1 Baseline Configuration and Score on SPECpower_ssj2008* benchmark: Platform with two IntelÆ XeonÆ Processor E5-2660. 16GB memory, Microsoft Windows Server 2008 Enterprise x64 Edition. Baseline http://newsroom.intel.com/rel=”nofollow””http:/www.spec.org/power_ssj2008/results/res2012q4/power_ssj2008-20121106-00576.html” source as of November 2012. Score: 5,544 overall ssj_ops/watt. New Configuration: Fujitsu PRIMERGY RX300 S8* platform with two IntelÆ XeonÆ Processor E5-2660 v2, 48GB, Microsoft Windows Server 2012 Standard Edition. Source: Submitted to SPEC for review/publication as of Sept. 10, 2013. Score: 8,097 overall ssj_ops/watt
2 Baseline Configuration and Score on SPECVirt_sc2013* benchmark: Platform with two IntelÆ XeonÆ Processor E5-2690, 256GB memory, RHEL 6.4(KVM). Baseline source as of July 2013. Score: 624.9 @ 37 VMs. New Configuration: IBM System x3650 M4* platform with two IntelÆ XeonÆ Processor E5-2697 v2, 512GB memory, RHEL 6.4(KVM). Source: Submitted to SPEC for review/publication as of Sept. 10, 2013. Score: 947.9 @ 57 VMs.
3 Source: Cisco Visual Networking Index: Global Mobile Data Traffic Forecast Update, 2012–2017
4 Source: IDC’s Digital Universe Study, sponsored by EMC, December 2012
5 Source: IDC’s Digital Universe Study, sponsored by EMC, December 2012 which states that data will double every other year from 2012 to 2020, reaching 40ZB in 2020 approximately a 40% CAGR.
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Intel does not control or audit the design or implementation of third party benchmark data or Web sites referenced in this document. Intel encourages all of its customers to visit the referenced Web sites or others where similar performance benchmark data are reported and confirm whether the referenced benchmark data are accurate and reflect performance of systems available for purchase.
Intel’s compilers may or may not optimize to the same degree for non-Intel microprocessors for optimizations that are not unique to Intel microprocessors. These optimizations include SSE2, SSE3, and SSE3 instruction sets and other optimizations. Intel does not guarantee the availability, functionality, or effectiveness of any optimization on microprocessors not manufactured by Intel. Microprocessor-dependent optimizations in this product are intended for use with Intel microprocessors. Certain optimizations not specific to Intel microarchitecture are reserved for Intel microprocessors. Please refer to the applicable product User and Reference Guides for more information regarding the specific instruction sets covered by this notice. Notice revision #20110804
Intel processor numbers are not a measure of performance. Processor numbers differentiate features within each processor family, not across different processor families: Go to: Learn About IntelÆ Processor Numbers