Target Market 1: High Performance Computing
There is one area that the Athlon MP was significantly more successful than
Intel's Xeon - the HPC (High Performance Computing) market. This market tailors
to the needs of the science community or any group of users that require a lot
of processing power and very little more.
As we've seen in the past, AMD's architectures are highly optimized for floating-point
intensive applications that haven't been SSE/SSE2 optimized; it turns out that
the majority of HPC applications fall directly into this category and thus benefit
significantly from Athlon MP, as well as the Opteron.
With the Opteron's SSE2 support, performance is even more competitive in those
scenarios that don't depend on raw x87 FP performance. To give you an example
of both the Opteron's competitiveness in scientific workloads as well as SSE2
optimized situations, here are two benchmarks from ScienceMark 2.0:
ScienceMark
2.0
Primordia Benchmark (Completion Time in Seconds - lower is better) |
AMD
Opteron 244 (1.80GHz)
Intel Xeon 2.80GHz
|
|
|
|
0 |
|
102 |
|
203 |
|
305 |
|
407 |
|
509 |
|
610 |
|
|
|
ScienceMark
2.0
BLAS Double Precision - SSE2 Vectorized Code (Peak MFLOPs - higher
is better) |
Intel
Xeon 2.80GHz
AMD Opteron 244 (1.80GHz)
|
|
|
|
0 |
|
496 |
|
991 |
|
1487 |
|
1982 |
|
2478 |
|
2974 |
|
|
|
You can see that the Opteron is clearly competitive with Intel's Xeon, however
the picture changes slightly if we toss in the latest Pentium 4 with an 800MHz
FSB into the mix:
ScienceMark
2.0
Primordia Benchmark (Completion Time in Seconds - lower is better) |
Intel
Pentium 4 3.0C (3.00GHz/800MHz FSB)
AMD Opteron 244 (1.80GHz)
|
|
|
|
0 |
|
100 |
|
200 |
|
300 |
|
399 |
|
499 |
|
599 |
|
|
|
ScienceMark
2.0
BLAS Double Precision - SSE2 Vectorized Code (Peak MFLOPs - higher
is better) |
Intel
Pentium 4 3.0C (3.00GHz/800MHz FSB)
AMD Opteron 244 (1.80GHz)
|
|
|
|
0 |
|
696 |
|
1393 |
|
2089 |
|
2786 |
|
3482 |
|
4178 |
|
|
|
So while AMD can enjoy a performance advantage for now, Intel is a much more
formidable competitor than they were when the Xeon was first launch. Once the
Xeon gets a larger L2 cache, a faster FSB (initially 667MHz) and a higher bandwidth
memory subsystem (all which are on the roadmap), AMD will have to work on getting
clock speeds up there to remain competitive on their home-turf.
Now that we've established AMD's previous and current strengths in the HPC
market, let's look at two servers that tailor to this market.
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