Dual AMD systems in rackmount cases
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Robert G. Brown rgb at phy.duke.eduMon Jun 24 09:13:12 PDT 2002
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On Mon, 24 Jun 2002, David Chalmers wrote: > Hi All, > > Does anybody have any experience with Dual AMD systems (MP2000) in 2 RU > rackmount cases? Is heat generation a problem? I am planning on > building a system with Tyan 2466 motherboards and 400 W power > supplies. Should I use 3RU cases? Heat generation is a serious problem for dual AMD's. You can succeed with 2U cases, but you will need a good case with several fans driving flow through the case and high-grade heatsinks for the CPUs themselves. As important as these two components is being able to provide ambient air at around 65F (or cooler, of course:-) on the air intake side of the cases and to get rid of the 75F air coming out of the air outflow side of the cases -- the cooler the ambient air, the more forgiving the node design in other ways. Dual AMD's will just plain crash when they get hot, and they get hot very, very easily as they draw about 150 W sustained under load. In our new server room, our 2U cases were not originally getting enough, cold enough, air and the temperature at the case rears was up in the 80's. The nodes would crash after 20-30 minutes of operation, consistently. Even with that situation repaired, we still get an occasional node crash that might well be heat. 3U cases would likely run more stably IF you still can provide cold ambient air and adequate stable air circulation patterns, but of course that reduces your cpu density from 1/U to 1.5/U. Then it comes down to whether you need the space/volume. If not, 3U would be better. Otherwise 2U. Based on my experiences thus far, I just wouldn't run 2466's in a 1U case. In 2U, a full sized rack with (say) 16 2U cases and 32 CPUs plus patch panel and/or switch plus a bit of spare room will burn about 2500 Watts -- something above 1 KW/meter^3. Doubling that to more than 2 KW/meter^3 seems unwise -- any sort of bobble in your cooling system will rapidly cause your stack to reach furnace temperatures, and even with nodes idling as they crash you might start to damage hardware before enough crashes can occur. Worse, even idle load is nontrivial at those densities -- the stack won't cool that much just because its components have crashed. rgb > > Thanks for any information. > > David > > _____________________________________________________________________________ > > David Chalmers Lab: 9903 9110 > Victorian College of Pharmacy Fax: 9903 9582 > 381 Royal Pde, Parkville, Vic 3053 http://synapse.vcp.monash.edu.au > Australia David.Chalmers at vcp.monash.edu.au > _____________________________________________________________________________ > > _______________________________________________ > Beowulf mailing list, Beowulf at beowulf.org > To change your subscription (digest mode or unsubscribe) visit http://www.beowulf.org/mailman/listinfo/beowulf > Robert G. Brown http://www.phy.duke.edu/~rgb/ Duke University Dept. of Physics, Box 90305 Durham, N.C. 27708-0305 Phone: 1-919-660-2567 Fax: 919-660-2525 email:rgb at phy.duke.edu
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