opteron a1100 arm

Ian Lepore ian at FreeBSD.org
Tue Feb 4 22:10:00 UTC 2014


On Tue, 2014-02-04 at 15:42 -0600, Jim Thompson wrote:
> On Feb 4, 2014, at 3:29 PM, Poul-Henning Kamp <phk at phk.freebsd.dk> wrote:
> 
> > In message <493DEB39-C4B4-409E-B8B2-B1B11E013754 at netgate.com>, Jim Thompson wri
> > tes:
> > 
> >>> No but it may well be an early reminder of the upcoming generation of
> >>> powerful ARM servers that we don't want to leave unsupported.
> >> 
> >> isn't that attractive when the 8-core, 64-bit Intel C20
> >> 00 parts are here, now, at a lower TDP
> >> (20W, .vs 25W for the a1100.  22nm rocks). 
> > 
> > I very much welcome a competing 64bit CPU into the marketplace and
> > will buy one myself, as soon as I can, for no other reason than to
> > help break the X86 monopoly on server architecture.
> > 
> > Monopolies are never a good thing.
> 
> True, but I didn’t say that the chip wasn’t interesting.   What I said is that it’s not that attractive (to the real market for these: micro servers).
> 
> The dual 10Gig Ethernet and 8 SATA 3.0 ports are interesting.   You won’t get that with a C2K system at 25W TDP, (4 x GigE that can run at 2.5Gbps per port, and 2 SATA 3.0 ports currently) but Intel owns IP for both, so if that becomes a differentiator for design wins, I’d expect a future variant to cover.
> 
> But by all means, port FreeBSD to it.  Perhaps it can be the long-desired “reference platform” to bring ARM into a “Tier 1” architecture status.
> 
> Jim

We have no shortage of ARM platforms.  IMO the thing that prevents ARM
from becoming tier 1 is manpower.

-- Ian




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