Inside Intel's Itanium

June 25, 2001, 10:57 AM —  InfoWorld.com — 

Unless you're willing to sift through technical minutia and swim through murky marketing hype, you could miss the potential benefits of Intel Corp.'s Itanium processor. Intel has projected a lengthy evolutionary time line for Itanium and is dropping hints that systems built on its first 64-bit CPU, the Itanium that's available now, will be niche machines.

Intel's caution is justified; neither the processor nor the platform that supports it is currently tuned for maximum performance. Even so, considering the level of performance the processor will ultimately deliver, Intel can afford to be a little less reserved about Itanium.

The Itanium CPU deserves attention for its innovative design; however, the enterprise server platform that Intel built around Itanium is the real star of this show. We've been testing the platform in the form of a prerelease implementation of Hewlett-Packard Co.'s rx4610 four-processor Itanium server, running the HP-UX and Red Hat Inc.'s Linux operating systems, as well as Microsoft Corp.'s 64-bit preview of Whistler. Based on our experience with HP's rx4610, the first generation of Intel's 64-bit architecture should give low-end and midrange Unix systems from Sun Microsystems Inc. , IBM Corp., and HP a run for their money.

What Itanium systems lack in core performance, they will make up for in value and openness. Itanium systems will allow IT shops to run their pick of commercial or open-source operating systems; expand with affordable, interchangeable, off-the-shelf components and peripherals; and play Itanium OEMs against one another on price and policies. In the long run, the Itanium platform will bring Unix system prices down and make proprietary system vendors more responsive to customers' interoperability demands.

Companies running applications on or developing applications for HP-UX or Linux should begin auditioning Itanium. Midrange Itanium servers, such as HP's quad-CPU rx4610, are worth considering for a wide array of applications. At present, only the HP-UX operating system is polished enough to run on Itanium, although Linux is close behind. Windows shops and those requiring maximum overall performance should wait for the Itanium platform to mature.

Itanium's EPIC story

Itanium's design, the product of a partnership between Intel and HP, centers on a concept called EPIC (explicitly parallel instruction computing). All modern CPUs have some capability of running multiple instructions (low-level commands such as add, multiply, or read from memory) simultaneously. Most CPUs analyze software on the fly, looking for opportunities to process instructions in parallel. EPIC shifts responsibility for this analysis from the CPU hardware to the programming language compiler used to create the application.

The result is a simpler CPU design and more consistent exploitation of the processor's capabilities. Eventually, as compilers get smarter and the Itanium platform evolves, EPIC's true potential will be revealed. But at its present level of implementation EPIC delivers not so much a leap as a step forward in terms of overall performance.

Intel's niche marketing campaign, which targets scientific, digital-media, cryptographic, large-database, and Web-caching uses, came about when the company realized Itanium's strengths: floating-point math and data handling. Floating-point calculations are used in everything from encryption to digital

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