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Sun Microsystems, Inc., today announced it has successfully booted the Solaris 10 operating system (OS)
on its high-end "ROCK" SPARC processor for the first time. This
important milestone comes ahead of schedule and within six weeks of Sun
receiving its first shipment of prototype ROCK processors.
Successfully Boots Solaris on "ROCK" Microprocessor First Silicon
Sun Microsystems, Inc., today announced it has successfully booted the Solaris 10 operating system (OS)
on its high-end "ROCK" SPARC processor for the first time. This
important milestone comes ahead of schedule and within six weeks of Sun
receiving its first shipment of prototype ROCK processors.
"Booting Solaris for the first time is a critical accomplishment in the
development of our high-end, chip multithreading (CMT) technology,"
said David Yen, executive vice president for Sun Microelectronics.
"This keeps us on track to ship our first systems based on ROCK in the
second half of 2008. These systems will bring unprecedented throughput
to high-end enterprise applicationslike ERP, CRM and large
databasesand continue to keep Sun years ahead of the competition."
The ROCK processor is a hexadeca-core (16-core) UltraSPARC
implementation delivering unparalleled efficiencies for both
single-threaded and multithreaded high-end applications. Sun is leading
the way in high-throughput computing with the combination of SPARC,
Solariswhich has long supported multithreaded hardware and
applicationsand Sun's unique multithreaded networking technology.
ROCK represents Sun's third generation of CMT processors, following
the UltraSPARC T1 and upcoming Niagara 2 processors. UltraSPARC T1with
up to eight cores and four threads per coreis currently available in
the Sun Fire T1000, T2000 and SPARC Enterprise systems. These systems,
running the industry-leading Solaris 10 OS, vaulted Sun into a new
league of performance and energy efficiency in late 2005. UltraSPARC
T1-based systems now account for more than $100 million per quarter in
Sun revenue and are helping Sun gain traction with new customers and in
new markets. In March 2007, Sun Fire T1000 and T2000 cumulative sales
passed the $500 million mark.
Systems based on the Niagara 2 processor are slated to become
available in the second half of calendar 2007. The Niagara 2 processor
will have up to eight threads per core and combines all major server
functions on the processor itself, making it Sun's first "system on a
chip." Niagara 2-based systems are expected to deliver twice the
throughput of existing T1000 and T2000 systems.
Read the original article: http://www.sun.com/aboutsun/pr/2007-05/sunflash.20070502.1.xml
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