As generally referred to in the art, a “server” is a computing device that is configured to perform operations for one or more other computing devices connected over a network. For an entity that requires computing infrastructure for handling relatively large amounts of network data, it is desirable to use servers that are designed to promote organizational/space efficiency and operational performance. In this regard, some servers are designed to be arranged in a “rack,” whereby the rack (or “cabinet”) houses numerous servers that are arranged, or “mounted,” vertically one on top of another (however, not necessarily in contact with one another). Such a server is generally referred to in the art as a “rackmount” server.
Rackmount servers are generally designed having a height corresponding to whole multiples of an industry standard rack mounting height dimension. For example, rackmount servers are generally referred to as “2U,” “3U,” “4U,” etc. systems, where the “U” designation refers to one dimensional increment of 1.75 inches in height along the vertical members of an Electronics Industry Alliance (EIA) industry-standard computer racking/mounting structure. Thus, for example, a 2U rackmount server is generally designed to be approximately 3.5 inches in height, less a small amount of clearance between vertically-adjacent rackmount servers in the rack (those skilled in the art will note that a standard rack is 19 inches wide; however, racks of other widths are available).
In view of size constraints and limitations of a rackmount server, it is important to combine and arrange components in the rackmount server in a manner that promotes operational performance and space efficiency.
According to one aspect of one or more embodiments of the present invention, a server comprises: a plurality of fans arranged along a inside surface of a front side of the server; a printed circuit board (PCB) disposed behind the plurality of fans; a plurality of CPU modules operatively connected to the PCB; and a plurality of I/O components disposed behind the plurality of CPU modules.
According to another aspect of one or more embodiments of the present invention, an apparatus comprises: a first section having (i) dual-redundant cooling devices, (ii) a PCB disposed behind the dual-redundant cooling devices, and (iii) at least one CPU module vertically connected to the PCB; and a second section having (i) at least one disk drive accessible from a first side of the apparatus, (ii) at least one power supply accessible from a second side of the apparatus, and (iii) at least one cooling device disposed between the at least one disk drive and the at least one power supply, where airflow in the first section is separate from airflow in the second section.
According to another aspect of one or more embodiments of the present invention, a rackmount server comprises: dual-redundant hot-swappable fans disposed along a front vented inner surface of the rackmount server; a plurality of CPU modules operatively connected to a backplane horizontally disposed behind the dual-redundant hot-swappable fans; and I/O circuitry disposed behind the plurality of CPU modules, where a first airflow zone in which air flow is provided by the dual-redundant hot-swappable fans to the plurality of CPU modules is separate from a second airflow zone in which air flow is provided to an internal power supply unit of the rackmount server.
Other aspects of the present invention will be apparent from the following description and the appended claims.
Specific embodiments of the present invention will now be described in detail with reference to the accompanying figures. Like elements in the various figures are denoted by like reference numerals for consistency. Further, in the following detailed description of embodiments of the present invention, numerous specific details are set forth in order to provide a more thorough understanding of the present invention. In other instances, well-known features have not been described in detail to avoid obscuring the description of embodiments of the present invention.
Generally, embodiments of the present invention relate to a rackmount server having a novel combination and/or arrangement of components.
The cooling devices 22 provide airflow to a plurality of CPU modules 20 (further described below with reference to
Further, those skilled in the art will note that although
Still referring to the rackmount server 10 shown in
Further, also along the side portion of the rackmount server 10 are power supplies 12. In one or more embodiments of the present invention, the power supplies 12 may contain four individual power supply units. In one or more other embodiments of the present invention, a different number of power supply units may be used.
Further, a fan 14 provides airflow to the power supplies 12. Thus, fan 14 may also effectively be used to provide airflow to the storage devices 16 due to the position of fan 14 between the storage devices 16 and the power supplies 12.
In the rackmount server 10 shown in
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Further, as discernible in
Referring again to
Further, in one or more embodiments of the present invention, a fan supported by the chassis 50 may be configured such that it individually provides uniform air flow, or substantially uniform air flow (defined as being air flow sufficient not to require changes in the configuration of components designed and/or expected to operate in uniform air flow conditions). In other words, air flow strength and direction from the fan is uniform across a planar region of the fan.
Referring again to
The CPU module 20 is “plugged into” a PCB (not shown) residing in the rackmount server 10 by way of a native connector 56 integral with the CPU module 20. Those skilled in the art will note that a configuration of the heat sink 52 is such that it overhangs at least a portion of the native connector 56, thereby providing additional area for heat dissipation.
Advantages of the present invention may include one or more of the following. In one or more embodiments of the present invention, a rackmount server has a combination of cooling devices, CPU modules, and I/O that promotes improved operational performance, reduced or more controlled operating temperatures, and/or increased space efficiency.
In one or more embodiments of the present invention, a rackmount server has an airflow zone for cooling CPU components that is separate from an airflow zone for cooling storage devices and/or power supplies.
In one or more embodiments of the present invention, cooling devices for providing airflow to CPU components and I/O in a rackmount server may be dual-redundant, thereby reducing a likelihood of overheating should one of the cooling devices fail or be removed.
In one or more embodiments of the present invention, cooling devices for providing airflow to the CPU components and I/O in a rackmount server may be hot-swappable, so as to allow for the repair or replacement of a cooling device without having to shut down a system.
In one or more embodiments of the present invention, cooling devices for providing airflow to CPU components and I/O in a rackmount server may be arranged to provide uniform air flow.
In one or more embodiments of the present invention, a cooling device for providing airflow to a power supply in a rackmount server may be used to provide airflow to one or more storage devices in the rackmount server.
In one or more embodiments of the present invention, a heat sink for a CPU module that may be plugged into a rackmount server overhangs at least a portion of the connector used to connect the CPU module to a motherboard residing in the rackmount server, thereby providing for potentially increased heat dissipation.
In one or more embodiments of the present invention, air flow provided to CPU components in a rackmount server is not blocked by one or more storage devices and/or power supplies in the rackmount server.
A detailed example of a rackmount server in accordance with the present invention is presented below in the form of a product specification. This specification describes the functionality, major components and subsystems, external interfaces, and operation of an exemplary server referred to as the Sun Fire X4600 system, available from Sun Microsystems, Inc. The Sun Fire X4600 system components can be seen in
The Sun Fire X4600 is a modular rack mounted server that has a 4U chassis with 8 CPU modules 80, each supporting one CPU socket, DIMMs, and local power conversion (VRM) on a single board. The modules are inserted from the top of the chassis and connect directly to the rear I/O motherboard. The Sun Fire X4600 provides the following maximum system configurations: 8 CPU chips (single or dual cores); 32 DIMMs (maximum 128 GB with 4 GB DIMM); 4 2.5″ SAS/SATA disks; 8 PCI Expansion slots; 2 PCI-X and 6 PCI-Express. The Sun Fire X4600 is 609 mm (24″) deep and is compatible with datacenter 28″ racks. Airflow is front-to-back and supports AMD Opteron™ processors at 35° C. ambient temperature. Standard I/O ports 82 include four 10/100/1000BaseT Gigabit Ethernet ports, graphics, serial, four USB ports, and an Ethernet management port. For further expansion, the Sun Fire X4600 provides six PCI-Express 84 and two PCI-X slots 86. A SAS/SATA disk controller is provided on board to support 4 SAS-only disk drives 88.
The Sun Fire X4600 includes an extensive set of RAS (Reliability, Availability, and Serviceability) features: hot-swappable and redundant fans and power supplies, remote lights-out server management, remote boot, and remote software upgrades.
The RAS Feature Set has Intelligent Systems Management including: SP (Service Processor); TPM (Trusted Platform Module); ECC Memory and Cache; Hot-swap Cooling Fans; Hot-swap Power Supplies; Temperature and Voltage Monitoring; KVM Redirection over Ethernet. A Sun Fire X4600 feature summary is included below in Table 1.
A more detailed block diagram of the Sun Fire X4600 is shown in
The Sun Fire X4600 provides the external interfaces described in Table 3.
Fan power is converted on the motherboard from 12 V to 24 V with dual 200 W boost converters. Each converter powers one row. Thus, if one converter fails, the redundant fans can continue to cool the system. The power supplies have an internal fan for cooling. The power supply fans may also provide cooling for the disk drives and DVD drive.
The Sun Fire X4600 system software detects fan failure, provides a front panel failure indication, generates a corresponding failure indication to the management system, and, if need be, places the chassis into a power-down state in a controlled manner. The power-down state minimizes chassis power dissipation, but maintains the SP operation to allow diagnostics and management functions.
The Sun Fire X4600 system software also checks for the presence of the fans. The system requires two fans installed in a row across the chassis to function correctly. If this minimum fan requirement is not met when power is applied to the chassis, the system will not be allow to power on. The system remains in a power-down state until at least one row of fans are installed. If a single fan is missing, an alert is generated indicating the problem. The motherboard contains the PCI-X Bridges, the SouthBridge, the SAS/S-ATA controller, and all I/O connectors. This board also connects to the hot swappable fan modules.
The mother board also includes the Service Processor (SP) module connector. The SP monitors the system and reports if there is a problem with the system, even if the main processors are hung or dead, or if the main 12V power has failed The SP monitors temperature and voltages, and is powered by the standby 3.3V from the power supplies.
The motherboard has the LSI SAS1064 controller (the “SAS Controller”). The controller shares a bus with the Slot 2 PCI-X slot and is wired to accept a Zero Channel Raid controller in that slot. This board includes one AMD Opteron™ CPU socket, 4 DIMMs, VRMs, IDPROM and sense circuits. The motherboard interconnects all the major system components, and, additionally, interconnects the HyperTransport busses between the CPU modules and the I/O board.
Processors are loaded in pairs in incrementing order, i.e., 0-1, 2-3, 4-5, 6-7. The unused sockets are loaded with a filler module for thermal requirements and electrical performance. The exception is the 2P case in which slots 0 and 4 are loaded and filler cards are not required. The CPU's are connected via the HyperTransport links as shown in the following diagrams. The dangling links connect to the I/O and the filler module jumper links indicating the number of filler boards in the path.
The disk backplane board has the connectors for the four drive bays and connection to the motherboard. A flex circuit is utilized to connect the disk backplane with the DVD drive to the motherboard.
The Sun Fire X4600 uses four load-sharing, n+1 redundant, hot-swappable 850 W power supplies. The power supplies have universal input, 12 VDC primary output and 3.3V standby. Main 12V power is connected to the Motherboard via a bus bar. Standby power and other control signals are routed via a flex circuit to the motherboard.
The power supply connector pin-outs are shown below in Table 4.
The power supply has one Bi-color LED on the back of the unit. The power supply LED condition indications are set forth below in Table 5.
The fans provide 474 CFM of airflow in a redundant configuration or 424 CFM in non redundant configuration. Air flow is front to back, for the entire chassis, not counting the disks and power supplies. The fan controller resides on the IO board, which will drive the fan speed and monitor the tachometer signals. Each fan has an LED to identify a failure.
The I2C bus is a 2 pin serial bus that interconnects EEPROMs, fan controllers, power supplies, temperature sensors, and other devices that are used to monitor the health and status of the system. In some cases, such as temperature, a separate interrupt immediately alerts the processors in case of a problem. All components connected to the SP_I2C bus are powered from the 3.3V Auxiliary rail.
The USB connector is shown in
The Serial connector is shown in
The VGA connector is shown in
The 10/100/1000BaseT connector is shown in
The Serial Attached SCSI (SAS) connector is shown in
While the invention has been described with respect to a limited number of embodiments, those skilled in the art, having benefit of this disclosure, will appreciate that other embodiments can be devised which do not depart from the scope of the invention as disclosed herein. Accordingly, the scope of the invention should be limited only by the attached claims.
Number | Date | Country | |
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60758948 | Jan 2006 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | PCT/US2007/000958 | Jan 2007 | US |
Child | 12101773 | US |