Comments
pemurray@interrasys.com wrote: Bruce, Excellent and insightful article!! Sybase has a fabulous product in PowerBuilder. It is a shame that developers are under pressure to move away from it. Your note that there may not be enough PowerBuilder developers is a chicken and egg problem for Sybase. Sybase needs to be agressive in several areas to reverse the tide. 1) The pricing has to change. Would it not be better to have many thousands of people buying it for half of its current list price rather than rely on a h...


Read Digital Edition


SYS-CON.TV
Blog-N-Play.com
Anytime a feature of a framework gives me something for free that I don't need to manually implement I'm a happy camper. One such feature of ASP.NET MVC 2 is jQuery client-side validation. The
Top Three Links You Must Click On


3Leaf Makes x86 Boxes into SMP Cloudware
Claims it will revolutionize data center cost models

Open Source and Cloud Computing on Ulitzer

3Leaf Systems, the well-funded start-up, dropped its fig leaf Tuesday and took a running jump into the pools of memory, I/O and cache that it can construct and deconstruct at will based on the application, creating scale-up shared-memory SMP systems the likes of mainframes, proprietary mid-range machines and pricey RISC-based Unix boxes out of racks of cheap and dirty two-socket scale-out x64 systems.

Lately things have been going mostly the other way around.

3Leaf claims it will revolutionize data center cost models.

Gabriel Consulting principal Dan Olds thinks it's "definitely a technology to watch."

He says, "3Leaf Systems is pioneering a unique hardware approach that will allow a single operating system instance to expand across multiple server blades, boxes or racks; or shrink to just a fraction of a single server. This will give customers the ability to scale various system resources to match a given workload, increasing overall utilization and efficiency."

Ironically the Intel-backed 3Leaf has started building its so-called Dynamic Data Center (DDC) out of AMD parts with first server deliveries slated for next month.

What the start-up's got is an ASIC and some software that can merge the isolated CPU, I/O and memory resources of multiple x86 systems into one big computing "fabric" so resources can be instantly delivered, just-in-time, to demanding applications for a lot less money than it normally takes.

Currently, using other people's widgetry, if a virtual machine starts to peak and has to go to another two-CPU server it can't take the resources it was using with it. It has to start all over again. That's a bummer 3Leaf means to overcome.

3Leaf's so-called DDC-ASIC is supposed to crunch through complex coherency protocols at lightning speed and enable distributed cache coherency among all system cores - complements of layering on top of 20 Gbps Infiniband or 10 Gbps Ethernet - creating the basic control structure needed for agility.

It's available now for AMD's quad-core Shanghai and six-core Istanbul Opteron processors supporting AMD's HyperTransport interconnect and up to 1TB of main memory across up to 16 nodes. Figure support for AMD's expected 12-core Magny Cours chip in Q1.

3Leaf's next version will support 32 nodes and up to 64TB of main memory using Intel CPUs compatible with the Intel Quick Path Interconnect (QPI) 1.1 beginning with the promised Sandy Bridge processors. Figure the end of next year or 2011.

AMD's HT-supporting widgetry was out first, which is why AMD got precedence. 3Leaf extends the HT bus to switches and virtualizes the chip's memory and cores.

CEO BV Jagadeesh claims 3Leaf's timing is impeccable. It needed the virtualization support and memory management tables now built into x86 chips, operating systems that can add and subtract resources, and low-latency commodity switches. It's a way of brushing off the start-up's aborted venture into I/O virtualization.

Anyway, 3Leaf's can currently provide an Opteron-based Dynamic Data Center Server (DDC-Server) made by Super Micro fitted out with its widgetry. The box is OEM-ready and up for adoption for cloud computing, data warehousing and data mining, HPC and social media.

3Leaf doesn't want to sell it itself; it wants OEMs to do it, but 3Leaf is making certain fixed configurations available to end users.

It figures that by integrating its technologies, OEMs can expand their offerings, tap into new market opportunities or fill a current product gap. In the process, they can get significantly lower costs, faster time-to-market, and the possibility of serving both the Intel and AMD x86 markets.

Users can treat these x86 servers as building blocks to create dynamic "systems" of any configuration, with the ability to push and pull specified resources across silos on-the-fly ultimately without rebooting.

3Leaf's technologies should also enable massively scalable cloud infrastructures based on these cost-optimized building blocks.

A DDC-Server configured with 1TB of shared memory, 192 2.8GHz Istanbul cores and 8TB of storage, all connected via an InfiniBand switch, with Linux and 3Leaf's DDC-Pool software lists for $250,000. One with 256GB of shared memory, 96 2.4GHz Istanbul cores and 4TB of storage runs $99,000. Each two-node server needs an ASIC.

The widgetry can use SSD, FC or SATA storage and 10GbE instead of InfiniBand.

3Leaf imagines in-memory databases that run thousands of times faster than we're used to. Large social media analysis that can find a needle in a haystack, transaction processing systems that don't stall, and HPC apps that are more accurate. It also imagines avoiding wasted memory because of unnecessary data replication and consolidating unused capacity into large enough usable capacity.

Its boxes should reduce opex by minimizing operating system administration, power and cooling, and capex by using garden-variety two-socket servers.

3Leaf says its DDC-Server provides hardware partitioning for fault isolation at the board/blade level and logical fault isolation so one OS instance can't bring down other instances - and it can offer high-availability failover across two or more instances of an OS within or across server racks.

3Leaf's software stack includes DDC-Pool, which coalesces multiple x86 boxes or blades into a single larger contiguous system, and supports the static reconfiguration of an OS across whole servers or blades in a compute cluster when rebooted; DDC-Share, which provides a greater degree of flexibility, allocating resources down to the core level and allowing instances of an OS to run across whole or parts of servers or blades, with static reconfiguration of the OS at reboot; and sometime next year DDC-Flex, which is supposed to provides runtime reconfiguration of OS images across any portion of a compute cluster. An OS image can expand or shrink in terms of CPU, memory and I/O resources without a reboot.

Pool and Share, both available now, work with Linux. Windows support is scheduled to be available next year.

In August, 3Leaf Systems broke the previous SPECjbb2005 performance record set by x86 systems by a factor of two. That's the current benchmark for eCommerce transaction processing and evaluates the performance of server-side Java applications.

3Leaf is focused initially on HPC which faces challenges in flexibility, cost management, software optimization time and realized performance as a fraction of peak speeds. Its roadmap also targets analytics, data warehousing and BI, the e-commerce side of OLTP and enterprise OLTP.

It's not good for everything; only apps that can deal with a NUMA architecture can run unmodified.

3Leaf is backed by Alloy Ventures, Enterprise Partners, Intel Capital, LSI and Storm Ventures to the tune of $67 million so far. The company is expected to go out for a D round next year. LSI, which led its C round, makes its ASICs.

About Maureen O'Gara
Maureen O'Gara the most read technology reporter for the past 20 years, is the Cloud Computing and Virtualization News Desk editor of SYS-CON Media. She is the publisher of famous "Billygrams" and the editor-in-chief of "Client/Server News" for more than a decade. One of the most respected technology reporters in the business, Maureen can be reached by email at maureen(at)sys-con.com or paperboy(at)g2news.com, and by phone at 516 759-7025.

In order to post a comment you need to be registered and logged in.

Register | Sign-in

Reader Feedback: Page 1 of 1

  Subscribe to our RSS feeds now and receive the next article instantly!
In It? Reprint It! Contact advertising(at)sys-con.com to order your reprints!
ADS BY GOOGLE
Latest Articles, News & Posts
Microsoft has combined its Azure group with its Server & Solutions group to form a Server & Cloud Division (SCD), a pairing of on-premises and cloud solutions inside its Server & Tools Business (STB) where they can share technologies. The move will put Azure in close proximity...
Delegates will leave Virtualization Expo with a full understanding of the interaction between virtual servers and the rest of the data center infrastructure. Indeed our overall aim is to ensure that all attendees leave the Jacob Javits Convention Center with abundant resources, i...
Cloud computing is a game changer. The cloud is disrupting traditional software and hardware business models by disrupting how IT service gets delivered. Entrepreneurial opportunities abound as this classic disruptive technology begins to proliferate, so it is no surprise that SY...
Slashed budgets and reduced staffing numbers delayed many security initiatives in 2009, but the vulnerabilities didn’t retreat and will only intensify in 2010, Unisys security experts predict. Looking ahead to 2010, Unisys predicts that government and commercial organizations wil...
As further proof to the collaboration between both companies, NetApp, the 2009 Microsoft Storage Solutions Partner of the year, utilizes a variety of Windows Server platform technologies to improve storage system management and streamline backup, recovery, and remote replication ...
Fujitsu will be offering end-to-end enterprise cloud services designed to help enterprises and ISVs in North America quickly reap the cost and agility benefits of reliable, secure cloud computing. Fujitsu enterprise cloud services will let companies migrate existing multi-platfor...
Subscribe to the World's Most Powerful Newsletters

ADS BY GOOGLE
Today's Top Links You Must Click On !
Microsoft has combined its Azure group with its Server & Solutions group to form a Server & Cloud Di...
Delegates will leave Virtualization Expo with a full understanding of the interaction between virtua...
Cloud computing is a game changer. The cloud is disrupting traditional software and hardware busines...
As further proof to the collaboration between both companies, NetApp, the 2009 Microsoft Storage Sol...
up.time represents a quantum leap forward for companies that need to drive both IT performance and c...
IBM Tuesday is supposed to wheel out some cloudware to monitor, predict and prevent data center outa...
Having been the lone male in my house for a long time, I get outvoted on many things, but especially...
This coming Tuesday, December 8, at 2:00PM EST, SYS-CON.TV will be broadcasting live from its 4th-fl...
After Google ‘s $10 million Friday acquisition of Applejet, Aaron Iba, AppJet’s CEO has announced th...
Cloud Computing, Virtualization, Service Oriented Architecture (SOA), Open Source Software (OSS) and...
Monitis, the leading provider of 100% Cloud-based network, server and application monitoring softwar...
California Company Artifex Software Inc has filed a lawsuit against Palm over the smartphone company...
I am always on the lookout for proof points to my thoughts on Enterprise Mobility and I was happy to...
Oracle’s ownership of MySQL could run off some open source and MySQL users according to a poll the 4...
Layer 7 Technologies, a security and governance company for SOA and Cloud Computing, announced the g...
Following on the heals of being named one of three EcoTech warriors earlier in the year, and then nu...
Ulitzer.com announced today "the World's 30 most influential Virtualization bloggers," who collectiv...
They discussed cloud computing, transparency, and Adobe's approach to this key aspect of the governm...
WSO2, the open source SOA company, today announced the launch of the WSO2 Cloud Platform. Available ...
Intel has canceled Larrabee, its vaunted many-core graphics retort to Nvidia and the ATI side of AMD...