Putting more cores to work in server farms

Nov 26, 2012 by Sarah Perrin
Putting more cores to work in server farms
Credit: 2012 EPFL

(Phys.org)—EPFL scientists have found that reorganizing the inner architecture of the processors used in massive data processing centers can yield significant energy savings. Their work is part of the EcoCloud program.

Streaming data, social networks, online games and services, databases – the number of interactions we have with the Internet is continually increasing. Every time we click on a link, we trigger an avalanche of computer operations that are then carried out in huge . It's estimated that these massive installations are responsible for 2% of total world . EPFL Scientists are proposing a novel solution to help rein in this runaway consumption. By integrating the same kind of that are used in smartphones, the amount of energy needed can be reduced by a factor of four. Their research is part of EcoCloud, a program designed to pioneer technologies to make cloud computing scalable, cost-effective and sustainable. It was recently published in an article in IEEE Micro.

The giants of the digital world – such as Facebook, , Microsoft – all depend on vast, powerful farms with tens of thousands of servers to manage their data processing. To help keep costs down and to improve , chips have been improved and packed as tightly as possible into the processors. But this approach has reached its limits.

Ecocloud's solution, called "scale-out processors," is based on a different approach. They propose a reorganization and redesign of the processors used in the servers. Instead of the current design based on a few, very powerful processor cores, they propose using more, but less powerful, cores. Each processor could thus respond to a larger number of requests.

Over-powerful

"The vast majority of Internet requests don't involve complicated analysis, but are generally just retrieval from memory," explains Boris Grot, from Parallel Systems Architecture Laboratory (PARSA). "But current servers are designed for carrying out a whole range of tasks, from complex scientific calculations to gaming. They're actually way too powerful for most basic demands. As a result, they're not being used in an optimal manner."

The researchers have combined the advantages of new-generation small processor cores developed for smartphone-type devices; their architecture is simple but their processing ability is very efficient. Concentrated in large numbers in a large chip, they would provide a better solution to the way servers are currently used. After having studied and compared several designs, EcoCloud scientists concluded that this arrangement maximizes space in the processors and significantly improves their performance.

Explore further: AMD rolls out 6300 server chips for higher performance / watt

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Eikka
not rated yet Nov 26, 2012
Just take the next logical step and make a specialized chip for database access, another for handling incoming requests etc.

An ASIC can do the job with a lot less because it has only the parts you need for the task at hand. The tradeoff is that you can't update the "software" if it turns out to have a bug, because it's hard wired.

El_Nose
not rated yet Nov 26, 2012
@Eikka

IBM already did that it was later called AIX. The machine is very powerful at doing its specialized job... but costs a fortune.

DB and DB/2 were IBM databases and they are powerful on specialized machines.

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