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A Processor Revolution – Sun’s UltraSPARC T1 and T2 Processors

Sun Microsystems’s new UltraSPARC T1 and T2 series of microprocessors has revived Sun’s position as one of the few third-party manufactures capable of contesting with the huge 2 processor companies who currently dominating the processor market. Sun fell behind for one or two years as their flagship processor, the UltraSPARC IV series, hit its performance boundaries. But they have reentered the competition with their new UltraSPARC processors, completely re-designed from the ground up, and capable of new degrees of power and flexibility.


The UltraSPARC T1 is the first processor produced by Sun that is both multicored and multithreaded. It first became available in 2005 with from four to eight CPU cores. Each core is literally capable of handling four threads at the same time. This suggests the processor as a whole is literally capable of handling anywhere from sixteen, 24, or even 32 threads simultaneously.


The UltraSPARC T1 is the 1st SPARC-based processor whose multiple cores can be partitioned. Several cores can be grouped together to work on a single task or set of jobs, while the leftover cores deal with the remainder of the processes and threads. Furthermore, the UltraSPARC T1 supports the Hyper-Privileged execution mode, meaning that it can partition its cores into as much as 32 logical domains ( one for each thread in an eight-CPU system ). Each one of these logical domains could run its own operating system example ( generally Solaris ).


The sole flaw to the UltraSPARC T1 is it’s only available in uniprocessor systems, which boundaries its vertical scalability in large business networks. The UltraSPARC T2, released in late 2007, addressed his problem amidst many other advances and enhancements.


The UltraSPARC T2 is in a number of ways a souped-up T1. It contains eight CPU cores, and each core is able on handling eight threads each, for a total of 64 threads being handled concurrently. This is double the maximum capacity of the T1, which toped out at 32 concurrent threads. Also like the T1, the T2 supports Hyper-Privileged execution mode. Whereas the T1 could only partition its cores into 32 logical domains, the T2, with more cores available, can partition them into 64 logical domains. Furthermore, a two-way SMP T2+ system can be partitioned into as many as 128 logical domains, each capable of running an example of Solaris.


In addition to doing everything the T1 does ( only better ), the T2 also had a couple of new features. Among other things, it had increased thread scheduling and instruction prefetching, allowing it to achieve a higher single-threaded performance. It also increased the processing speed for each thread from 1.2 for the T1 to 1.4 GHz. While the T1 has a Jbus interface, the T2 has a PCI Express port. The L2 cache on the T2 was increased to 4 MB ( versus the T1’s three MB ). It has four dual-channel FBDIMM memory controllers, and eight encryption engines. In early 2008, Sun released a new UltraSPARC T2 and processor, which is an SMP-capable version of the UltraSPARC T2.


Sun MicroSystems‘ UltraSPARC T1 and T2 prove that, in spite of rocketing competition from Intel and AMD, Sun is still in the processor race, particularly in the high-end server processor market. Sun’s designs continue to be cutting edge and, as the core partitioning system demonstrates, flexible.

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