By
Stephen Shankland
Thursday, March 09 2006 10:48 AM
URL:
http://www.zdnetasia.com/news/hardware/0,39042972,39323568,00.htm
SAN FRANCISCO--Intel's "Tukwila" processor will be a significant departure
from earlier Itanium models, but bigger changes will come with its sequel,
"Poulson."
When the Tukwila chip arrives in 2008, the biggest difference will be
system-level changes such as how the chip plugs in, said Pat Gelsinger, general
manager of Intel's Digital Enterprise Group. Poulson will bring changes to the
chip itself.
"Tukwila is a fairly big system-architecture departure. Poulson will be a
much bigger microarchitecture step in the Itanium line," Gelsinger said Tuesday
in an interview here at the Intel Developer Forum. "Poulson is a bolder step."
Breaking up major changes into smaller steps is a reasonable way to avoid
pitfalls of wholesale changes, said Insight 64 analyst Nathan Brookwood. "Every
time you throw everything up in the air at once, you increase the odds that when
something lands, it's going to be broken, and it's going to be hard to figure
out which."
Intel made a similar move with its "Bensley" platform, a package that
combines the company's next-generation Xeon server processor--first
"Dempsey" and "Woodcrest" shortly thereafter--with a supporting chipset and
network controller. "They are very different microarchitectures, but they use
the same system interface," Brookwood said.
The major system-level change expected with Tukwila is a new method to
connect the processor to the rest of the system. Intel doesn't comment on its
particulars, but server makers have called the technology the Common System
Interconnect. Those computer makers also say one major part of the interconnect
is moving the memory subsystem controller onto the chip, a step that Intel's
major competitors--IBM, Advanced Micro Devices and Sun Microsystems--already
have made.
However, Intel declines to comment on interconnect details, and at least one
key element has changed significantly: that Xeon and Itanium chips would share
it, hence the "common" label. The first Xeon to use the interconnect,
"Whitefield," was canceled in 2005 and replaced by "Tigerton," which uses a
variation of the current front-side bus interconnect.
Kirk Skaugen, general manager of Intel's Server Platforms Group, said the
common platform still will arrive, though "in a later time" after Tukwila's
debut.
Intel and Hewlett-Packard, the initiator of the Itanium project and its
biggest advocate, have begun trying to take
the offensive with the chip family. The new assertiveness--including US$10
billion in Itanium technology and market development spending through 2010
from the two companies and other Itanium allies--comes after several years
of troubles with weak customer acceptance and marketing challenges.
The most recent Itanium problem was the delay
of the next-generation model, "Montecito," from late 2005 to the second quarter
of 2006. HP systems with the chip are expected this summer, HP has said.
At the same time, Intel pushed back "Montvale," an update to Montecito, from
2006 to 2007, and pushed Tukwila from 2008 to 2009. On Tuesday, Skaugen said
Poulson will arrive "out toward the end of the decade."
The delay stemmed from issues with timing circuitry within the chip,
Gelsinger said. "We use some very sophisticated design techniques and clock
technologies that were not as robust as we expected. It took some time to work
through circuit electrical marginalities to get the part to be robust enough,"
he said.
To deal with the issue, Intel lowered the top clock speed 200MHz and stripped
out one Montecito feature called Foxton that would have provided a 200MHz
clock-speed boost when such a move wouldn't cause heating problems. Foxton isn't
dead, though, Gelsinger said.
"The concept is a powerful one, and you will see it in our product line,"
including both Xeon and Itanium models, Gelsinger said.
Later this month, HP is launching its third-generation high-end Itanium
server, based on a chipset code-named Arches. Initially, it will ship with
current "Madison" models of Itanium, but HP will offer promotions later this
year to encourage customers to upgrade their Integrity Superdome servers to
Montecito.
It's not the only promotion in place. Through the end of April, HP is
offering to halve processor costs in its Integrity line of Itanium servers. "HP,
in conjunction with our processor partner Intel, is offering an incentive
program to qualified customers whereby you can purchase new HP Integrity servers
and get half of the processors in the servers at no charge," the company said on
its Web site.