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Force adds Linux to CompactPCI server blade

Jan 14, 2003 — by LinuxDevices Staff — from the LinuxDevices Archive — views

Fremont, CA — (PR excerpt) — Solectron subsidiary Force Computers today introduced Linux support on its Common Heterogeneous Architecture for Multi-Processing (CHAMP) server blade with AltiVec (AV) technology. Baselined on a port of Linux 2.4.18, this quad G4 CompactPCI blade offers five Motorola PowerPC processors ideally suited for intense data processing and throughput demands of 'high-touch' packet… applications.

With four MPC7410 processors performing packet analysis and one MPC8240 processor managing onboard data flow, Compact CHAMP-AV provides 4,096 H.110 channels of time-division multiplexing (TDM) switching along with meeting packet-processing requirements. An upgrade to a Compact CHAMP/Linux solution using Force's full-feature Linux support package enables complete control over all blade hardware aspects as well as reduces total cost of ownership by up to 10 times compared to legacy circuit-based telecom switches.

“Five PowerPC MPC8240 I/O processor manage all on board dataflow, which frees the four MPC7410s to concentrate solely on packet analysis and inspection,” said Robert Hoyecki, director of application engineering for Force's High-Density Computing group. “For high-touch packet applications, the 4,096 channels on the H.110 interface can be routed to all available onboard resources so all the G4s can perform packet analysis. Specifically, telecom circuit-based switch applications can benefit by upgrading to Compact CHAMP-with potential total cost of ownership savings of up to 10 times versus legacy technologies.”

To best organize the resources of the Compact CHAMP-AV blade, its four PowerPC G4 500MHz processors are divided into two symmetric multi-processing (SMP) nodes, each operating as a dual MPC7410 processor SMP Linux system. In addition, each SMP node has: 4MBytes L2 Cache, 256MBytes dedicated, local SDRAM, a tightly coupled PCI mezzanine (PMC) slot, one PICMG 2.16-compliant Ethernet interface.

As the OS manages memory sharing and the Ethernet interfaces, the SMP node architecture seamlessly distributes multi-threaded applications across all the processors. Thus, this enables focus on customer applications and not interprocessor communication. As an example, for a high-touch packet application such as packet inspection, the local memory of the SMP nodes would receive off-board packets from the H.110 bus, process them according to a high-touch packet algorithm, then retransmit the packets off board.

Off-board transmission is conducted through the onboard PICMG 2.16 Ethernet interfaces or by special I/O cards populating the associated PMC slots, which can support eight Ethernet interfaces or other interfaces with a total data rate of OC3. Performance is further enhanced by Force's Linux support package with its optimization of data flow.

 
This article was originally published on LinuxDevices.com and has been donated to the open source community by QuinStreet Inc. Please visit LinuxToday.com for up-to-date news and articles about Linux and open source.



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