Search: Options

Fabric7 banks on high-end x86 servers

By Stephen Shankland
Staff Writer, CNET News.com
Published: November 1, 2005, 3:16 PM PST

A Silicon Valley start-up called Fabric7 has bet that Advanced Micro Devices' Opteron processor and built-in networking will help its high-end x86 servers succeed where others haven't.

Several companies have tried to build higher-end x86 servers--those with processors such as Intel's Xeon and AMD's Opteron. Servers from Data General and Sequent Computer Systems vanished after the companies were acquired. Hewlett-Packard, Dell and Intel canceled their eight-processor products. And, models sold today by IBM and Unisys haven't set the world afire.

Fabric7, an 80-employee company based in Mountain View, Calif., is taking a different approach, inspired by IBM's mainframes--powerful machines with copious networking capacity and processing power that can be subdivided to run different tasks. The start-up's target is mid-range Unix systems from Sun Microsystems, IBM and Hewlett-Packard, typically running databases or application servers, said Chief Executive Sharad Mehrotra.

The company is nothing if not ambitious. "We think we can take down the price structure almost fivefold, on average, across mid-range and high-end servers, and we still would make a lot of money," Mehrotra said. That doesn't mean they'll come cheap: The company's first server model's price will average between $100,000 and $250,000, he said.

That first model is the Q160 server, which accommodates as many as eight dual-core Opteron chips and as much as 128GB of memory. It can be subdivided into separate domains, each with its own operating system and dedicated input-output capacity for either storage or data networks. The networking capacity also can be used to bridge one server with another, letting the first use network adapters of the second. And the server has built-in acceleration of networking tasks, such as encryption and XML data processing.

Like many companies today, Fabric7 envisions a data center in which new operating systems are created and destroyed to adjust rapidly to changing work demands. Systems also can be reconfigured as they run to expand or shrink computing resources.

The company isn't trying to tackle the entire x86 market, where shipment volumes are high and profit margins low. "We carefully exclude from our product the volume server infrastructure," Mehrotra said. "We think there are plenty of players in that market, it's heavily commoditized and we don't know how to add value there."

But even entering the comparatively rarefied realm of higher-end servers isn't easy. Ex-Sun employee Andy Bechtolsheim founded a start-up called Kealia that designed eight-Opteron servers. But he had planned to sell them only for a narrow niche of media-handling tasks; it wasn't until Sun acquired his company that the designs were reoriented to the general-purpose server market.

AMD's Opteron, unlike Intel's rival Xeon, is well suited to higher-end systems with eight processors, Mehrotra said. As AMD releases chips that are suited for larger systems, Fabric7 plans to follow suit.

One hurdle for high-end x86 systems has been software support. Mehrotra believes Linux and Windows are mature enough now, though. Fabric7 hopes to have its servers certified to work with Linux from Red Hat and Novell by the end of the year and with Microsoft Windows Server 2003 by the spring. Certification with software companies such as those that sell databases comes next, he added.

The Q160 server incorporates the networking abilities that lets customers build the fabric of interconnected servers, but the company also plans a more conventional server, the Q80. That machine, also an eight-processor Opteron model, is due in January and will have prices averaging between $50,000 and $100,000, Mehrotra said.

The company has some credentials for a network-enabled server company. Mehrotra was one of the initial designers of Sun's UltraSparc V processor, though he left the company in 1999, long before the chip was canceled in 2004. He then founded a networking start-up, Procket Networks, which Cisco Systems acquired in 2004.

The company's chief hardware designer is Tom Lovett, an IBM distinguished engineer who formerly worked for Sequent. In charge of software is Nakul Saraiya, who was a principal engineer at Akamai Technologies.

The company has raised $32.5 million from investors including Selby Ventures Partners and New Enterprise Associates.

TrackBack

See links from elsewhere to this story.

TalkBack

No discussion exists, click here to start it.

advertisement
advertisement

Deal of the day

Eight-device remote shipped for $32
Once you factor in the free shipping, Amazon.com has the best price on this eight-device remote, which has a list price of $79.99. Read more...


Scan the 15 newest and most read stories on News.com right now. Learn more

Updated: 2:38 PM PDT
View as:
Man gets 7 years for software piracy Photos: Pictures that lie  Photos: Top 10 must-have gadgets  Ford Nucleon: Back to the future? 'Second Life' suffers real-world breach Millionaire cosmonaut takes on Microsoft Are fake videos next? Superlatives for Microsoft Max Photos: Making the first disk drive  Can Jobs marry the computer and TV? Virtual tour of Steve Wozniak's home Study: Promising future for power-line broadband Florida, others mulling electronics recycling bills Microsoft readies Atlas AJAX tooling Here comes the everyday carbon-fiber car
Legend:
Older
Newer
Larger boxes indicate hotter stories.

Resource center from News.com sponsors

Intel Server Virtualization Knowledge Center

Delivering Value Across Infrastructure
Click Here!

Intel servers deliver value across the infrastructure by providing server platforms that are reliable, energy efficient, high performance, and scalable. Apart from providing best in class platforms, Intel continues to work with software, hardware, operating system vendors and original equipment manufacturers to ensure IT customers have the best experience on Intel platforms.

Read more >

Top picks from News.com readers

Readers who read Fabric7 banks on high-end x86 servers also read...

More Info

Copyright ©2006 CNET Networks, Inc. All Rights Reserved. Privacy Policy | Terms of Use