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kortilla 3 days ago

But the majority of heat is going to come from the CPU and this is a product to run arbitrary customer workloads.

If the customers leave these things idle, then oxide is going to shine. But a busy rack is going to be dominated by CPU heat.

throw0101c 3 days ago | parent | next [-]

According to Oxide Computer, they found that going from 20mm to 80mm fans dropped their chassis power usage (efficiency is to the cube of the radius): a rack full of 1U servers had 25% of its power going to the fans, and they were able to get down to 1.2%:

* https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hTJYY_Y1H9Q

From their weblog post:

> Compared to a popular rackmount server vendor, Oxide is able to fill our specialized racks with 32 AMD Milan sleds and highly-available network switches using less than 15kW per rack, doubling the compute density in a typical data center. With just 16 of the alternative 1U servers and equivalent network switches, over 16kW of power is required per rack, leading to only 1,024 CPU cores vs Oxide’s 2,048.

* https://oxide.computer/blog/how-oxide-cuts-data-center-power...

Aurornis 3 days ago | parent | next [-]

20mm fans aren’t used in server cooling applications. You must be thinking of 40mm fans.

Going from 40mm fans to 80mm fans will not take energy usage from 25% to 1-2%. They must have taken an extreme example to compare against. What they’re doing is cool, but this is a marketing exaggeration targeted at people who aren’t familiar with the space.

Oxide also isn’t the only vendor using form factors other than 1U or focusing on high density configurations. Using DC power distribution is also an increasingly common technique.

To be honest, a lot of this feels like Apple-esque marketing where they show incredible performance improvements, but the baseline used is something arbitrary.

steveklabnik 3 days ago | parent | next [-]

Our claim is not that just switching fans drops from 25% to 1-2%. We are claiming that the rack has very low energy usage, and we like to talk about the fans as one part of that reason because it's very visceral and easy to understand.

newsclues 3 days ago | parent | prev [-]

I think 1U was poorly optimized for scale, and thus bigger chassis in a rack could use bigger heatsinks and fans at lower speeds instead of small screamers.

yencabulator 3 days ago | parent | prev [-]

This is not any different than the "blade" form factor that was popular in the 90s. Shared power and cooling that was not constrained by the height of a 1U rack chassis, with larger fans. Hell, even Supermicro has blade-style chassis with 80mm fans. This is not novel.

It's just plain old engineering, optimized to sell whole racks not individual servers or <=8U units, sprinkled with opinions about low-level firmware etc, with a bespoke OS and management stack.

sunshowers 3 days ago | parent | next [-]

Yes, we're primarily an engineering company, not a research organization.

It's also about what we don't have. We don't have a UEFI, for example, which means we don't have UEFI vulnerabilities.

yencabulator 3 days ago | parent [-]

Yeah and you're doing good work there. It just kinda annoys me when people go from "oh that's a cool company" into idolatry. 1U servers were always a poor form factor for modern day hot chips & drives. Breaking that mold has been done over and over and isn't something that should be treated as new.

Scaling from the 8U (that blades could already do in the 90s) to full rack as the unit of "slide unit in to connect" DC power and networking is way cooler than using 80mm fans.

Re UEFI: I feel like that part is less about UEFI itself and more about how you have very minimal third party firmware.

I'm pretty excited about openSIL and such in general. If only AMD could execute well in the world of software.

sunshowers 3 days ago | parent [-]

I can't speak to others' views, but having worked with large-scale bare-metal deployments at Meta, I personally admired Oxide for its clear product vision and rigorous first-principles approach (Rust is a real game-changer!), and applied to work here for that reason.

throw0101c 3 days ago | parent | prev | next [-]

> It's just plain old engineering, optimized to sell whole racks not individual servers or <=8U units, sprinkled with opinions about low-level firmware etc, with a bespoke OS and management stack.

Yes, "just".

3 days ago | parent | prev | next [-]
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jiveturkey 3 days ago | parent | prev [-]

An F1 car is also just plain old engineering, optimized to get around the track quickly, sprinkled with opinions and with a niche bespoke drivetrain. Nothing to see here.

zozbot234 3 days ago | parent | prev [-]

Their rack scale from-scratch redesign includes fans big enough that they've reportedly managed to cool CPU hardware that was actually designed for water-cooling, with no expectation for air cooling (though admittedly, they say they only achieved this just barely, and with a LOT of noise). That seems like something that's going to be objectively verifiable as a step up in efficiency.