Dell engineers have been working with Intel and online auction site eBay for the past six years to develop a custom system that uses water to cool servers in hyperscale data centers. Now the tech vendor is ready to unveil the water-cooling system to the industry.
Dell officials on June 2 introduced the system—code-named “Triton”—created by the company’s Extreme Scale Infrastructure (ESI) unit, which had been using it as a proof-of-concept for eBay.
The ESI group is targeting the new technology at hyperscale and near-hyperscale environments, where power efficiency and CPU performance both are critical metrics.
The cooling system enables the processor to run at higher frequencies, providing performance gains of up to 59 percent over the widely used Xeon E5-2680 v4 at similar costs, and offers 70 percent better performance-per-dollar than air-cooled systems, they said.
Combining the Triton system with the customized Xeon processor can deliver double-digit performance increases over the highest-performing Xeon chips on the market, officials said.
“We started work on Triton five to six years ago,” Austin Shelnutt, principal thermal architect for Dell’s Data Center Solutions (DCS) unit, told journalists and analysts during the vendor’s Enterprise Innovation Days event. He noted the company has “already put Triton into different platforms.”
eBay officials said Triton has improved the performance of the company’s search servers.
“We worked closely with Dell to develop a customized server solution which utilizes an innovative approach of liquid cooling 200W CPUs to deliver large performance and efficiency gains,” Nick Whyte, vice president and fellow for search technology at eBay, said in a statement, adding the collaboration with Dell and Intel has enabled the company’s search servers to achieve “an increase of 70 percent in throughput (QPS—queries per second) with the Intel Xeon processor E5-2679 v4 versus the previous generation Intel Xeon processor E5-2680 v3 in the Triton proof-of-concept.”
Triton is the latest technology to come out of Dell’s ESI unit. Dell nine years ago launched DCS to develop systems that address the needs of the largest hyperscale vendors—including Google, Facebook, Amazon, eBay and Baidu—for fast, scalable and customized infrastructure offerings that are optimized for particular workloads.
These organizations can include telecommunications companies, oil and gas firms, Web-tech companies, hosting businesses and research groups. In December, Dell brought both these groups under the ESI umbrella to bring better clarity to the company’s hyperscale efforts and enable the units to better share everything from marketing and engineering efforts to the supply chain.
The work on Triton fits in with ESI’s mission, according to Jyeh Gan, director of product management, marketing and strategy for the unit. Other system OEMs have looked to bring liquid cooling to servers and other data center gear over the years.
IBM first introduced liquid cooling to some mainframes in the 1960s, and in the last decade the company unveiled its Rear Door Heat Exchanger technology as an option for the server rack doors for its Power and Intel-based System x servers. (The x86-based systems were sold two years ago to Lenovo.) More recently, Hewlett Packard Enterprise (then Hewlett-Packard) in 2014 brought liquid cooling to its Apollo 8000 systems, while Intel and supercomputer maker SGI announced that year that they were experimenting with a liquid developed by 3M that servers could be submerged in
Originally published on eWeek
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