Not long ago, Sun announced the newest UltraSparc CPU, code-named Niagara, and officially dubbed the T1. What was readily
apparent was that this newcomer wasn’t your daddy’s Sparc. Sun’s newly released Sun Fire T2000 UltraSparc T1-based server
isn’t your daddy’s Sun Fire either.

Sun Fire T2000
Sun Microsystems, sun.com
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Very Good 8.2 |
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| criteria |
score |
weight |
| Availability |
8 |
25% |
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| Performance |
8 |
20% |
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| Scalability |
8 |
20% |
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| Management |
8 |
15% |
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| Serviceability |
9 |
10% |
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| Value |
9 |
10% |
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Cost: Base price: $8,295; as tested, $26,995 with two 73GB 2.5-inch SAS drives and 32GB RAM
Bottom Line: Sun’s newest server sports Sun’s newest Sparc, the UltraSparc T1. Providing up to eight cores per CPU, and each core running
at 1.0GHz or 1.2GHz, the Sun Fire T2000 provides good threaded performance with low power consumption and low heat generation.
FPU and single-thread performance is a definite stumbling block.
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About our Reviews and Scoring Methodology
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Historically, a big horsepower Sun server such as the quad-CPU Sun Fire V440 is big in every way: physical size, power consumption,
and price. Sun also began moving to lower-cost, lower-performance boxes such as the single CPU Netra X1. The T2000 is really
the middle ground between the two, bringing higher processing power into a smaller chassis, but with an important twist.
The T2000 is technically a single-CPU system with its sole UltraSparc T1 processor. The difference is the T1’s architecture,
which contains eight cores, each capable of handling four concurrent threads, for a total of 32 simultaneous threads. In fact,
when pulling info on the CPUs from Solaris 10, 32 virtual CPUs are shown, each at roughly 1GHz. The UltraSparc T1 will be
available in 1GHz and 1.2GHz flavors, with four, six, or eight cores.
Within the chip itself sits a 136GBps crossbar switch carrying data within the CPU, and 3MB of L2 cache that’s shared among
the cores. Beyond this are four DDR2 channels, bringing memory bandwidth to 23GBps. Amazingly, Sun claims this CPU consumes
less than 80 watts and runs considerably cooler than a comparable Xeon CPU, which runs more than 100 watts.
Although the UltraSparc T1 sports up to eight cores running at 1GHz or 1.2GHz, floating-point operations are farmed out to
a shared FPU. This means that the T1 simply isn’t going to be great at heavy math, and certainly isn’t going to be the CPU
of choice for non-threaded tasks, such as simulations.
What the T2000 and the T1 CPU are very good at is nearly any form of threaded tasks such as Web and application services.
The T2000 is a 2U system pulling much less power than the 3U Opteron system I tested. Taking the results of my Web serving
tests and extrapolating them against power consumption, rack density, and heat generation -- which directly links to datacenter
cooling costs -- I found that the T2000 actually provides more bang for the buck.
Under the hood
The UltraSparc T1 is fully compatible with the Sparc V9 standard, so code written for any UltraSparc platform will run on
the T2000. My evaluation T2000 came with a fresh install of Solaris 10.
Literally the first thing I noticed about the T2000 was its weight. For a 2U server with dual power supplies and four internal
hot-swap drives, it’s surprisingly light. Its weight is no doubt attributable to the use of 2.5-inch SAS (serial attached
SCSI) disks and the 2/3 rack-length chassis. The back panel houses the two hot-swappable power supplies, four embedded Gigabit
Ethernet ports, a standard DIN9 RS-232 port, a separate system console port, two USB 2.0 ports, and an SC (subcriber connector)
management Ethernet port providing lights-out system management.
There are also four expansion slots available: two PCI-X and two PCI-E. In my evaluation unit, one of the PCI-X ports was
taken up with the SAS controller for the 2.5-inch internal drives, but Sun claims that this will be integrated onto the mainboard
in upcoming production runs. Up front, the T2000 sports two more USB ports, the four hot-swap 2.5-inch drive bays housing
73GB 10K rpm SAS drives, and a DVD drive.