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ARM-based servers to carve out a datacentre niche

by Daniel Robinson

03 Sep 2010

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Smooth-Stone caused a minor sensation in August when the Texas-based start-up disclosed a funding injection from some big names in the IT industry to help it develop power efficient server chips based on the ARM architecture.

The news followed an earlier announcement that ARM itself had received European Commission funding for research into more energy efficient datacentre platforms based on ARM processors.

Moves such as this highlight the growing interest in saving the energy used by servers, especially in datacentres, which now account for a small but increasing percentage of the total energy consumption in countries such as the US.

This is the background to the news that Smooth-Stone is working to develop ARM-based chips that can drive more energy efficient servers. However, the company faces a number of challenges.

ARM's chips would seem to be ideal for power-efficient servers, as the architecture has long emphasised power efficiency, leading to its almost ubiquitous presence in battery powered mobile devices and phones. But at the same time, ARM chips have lagged behind x86 processors in absolute performance for some time, so an ARM chip is no match for an Intel or AMD chip of the same clock speed.

"The ARM architecture has always been superior in performance-per-watt, but it's never been interesting in terms of raw performance until now," said Barry Evans, co-founder and chief executive of Smooth-Stone.

Evans, a former Intel executive responsible for the chip firm's ARM-based XScale processors, said that Smooth-Stone is aiming to build on that low-power design philosophy and grow absolute performance so that ARM chips can handle server workloads while retaining their performance-per-watt superiority.

Getting ARM-based servers accepted will not be an easy task in a market dominated by x86-based servers from a handful of big players, but power efficiency just might prove to be the lever that a startup could use to differentiate itself, according to Adrian O'Connell, datacentre research director at analyst firm Gartner.

"One of the dynamics of the server market is that is a very, very consolidated segment of the IT industry in terms of the vendors that play in it. Because of that, it can be really hard to achieve differentiation," he explained.

However, ARM-based servers are still likely to represent a niche part of the market, at least initially. For one thing, x86 servers are backed by a vast number of commercial software applications and services, few of which are likely to be available for the ARM architecture.

"One of the biggest issues is around the software stack, and this is one of the real advantages for x86. Given this mass of support, it is difficult to see anything that will change things in a short space of time," said O'Connell.

Where the power efficiency of the ARM chip may find a target is in large " scale-out" environments, such as internet datacentres, where applications tend to be load-balanced across a number of physical systems.

"The larger the scale of your infrastructure, the more acutely you feel any inefficiency, so that's where we're getting interest in our technology, from people who are looking for an order of magnitude improvement in efficiency," said Evans.

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