AMD Opteron 2435
Manufacturer: AMD
UK Price (as reviewed): £828.13 (inc. VAT)
US Price (as reviewed): $1,069.91 (ex. Tax)
AMD has traditionally used its workstation/server range of Opteron processors to début new technology. Opterons were the first dual-core and quad-core AMD CPUs, and are now also the first AMD CPUs with six physical cores. These new six-core Opterons are known as the 2400-series and 8400-series - the only difference being that up to two 2400-series Opterons can be installed in a motherboard, while up to eight 8400-series Opterons can be used.
Both types of new Opteron use the same Socket F packaging as that of their predecessors, but as we doubt that many
bit-tech readers build servers for a data centre, we decided to take a look at the Opteron 2435, the highest-spec 2400-series model.
The Opteron 2435's six cores are clocked at 2.6GHz, which is higher than any other six-core Opteron but 500MHz slower than the fastest quad-core Opteron, the elusive 2393SE. We say elusive, because despite our best efforts we've been unable to find a single Opteron 2393SE in the UK, let alone a pair. As a result, we had to test the Opteron 2435 against the next best available Opteron, the 2382, which is clocked at 2.6GHz.
![AMD Opteron 2435 CPU Review Introduction](http://images.bit-tech.net/content_images/2009/07/amd-opteron-2434-review/sixcore.png)
Despite having two more cores than earlier Opterons, the new 2435 has the same low TDP of 75W - nearly half the 130W of Intel's fastest workstation/server CPU, the
Xeon W5580.
AMD hasn't just added another two cores to the Opteron 2435 though; there are also several new architectural features. The most important of these is the upgraded Hyper-Transport link, from version 1.0 to version 3.0, thus increasing its effective frequency from 1GHz to 2.4GHz.
As the Hyper-Transport bus is used for all communications between the CPU and the rest of the system, this should yield a substantial performance increase in all applications. Unfortunately, as no dual-processor Socket F motherboards support Hyper-Transport 3.0, the Opteron 2435 is forced to run at 1GHz. Hyper-Transport 3.0-compatible motherboards based on a new AMD chipset are due for release in a couple of months.
The Opteron 2435 also marks the introduction of another new feature - HT Assist. This technology helps to cut down the number of probes a core must perform when searching for data that may be stored in another core's cache. Although this is unlikely to significantly improve performance in a dual-processor, 12-core system, it should provide more of a boost in a four or eight-CPU configuration with 24 or more cores.
Opteron 2435 CPU details
- Frequency: 2.6GHz
- Core: Istanbul
- Packaging: Socket F
- L1 cache: 128KB per core
- L2 cache: 512KB per core
- L3 cache: 6MB accessible by all cores
- Memory controller: 2.2GHz
- Memory: Dual-channel ECC registered DDR2-800MHz
- TDP: 75W
Click to enlarge
Want to comment? Please log in.