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Xserve - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Xserve

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

A small Xserve cluster with an Xserve RAID.
A small Xserve cluster with an Xserve RAID.

Xserve is the name of Apple Inc.'s 1U rackmount line of server computers. When the Xserve was introduced in 2002, it was Apple's first designated server hardware design since the Apple Network Servers of 1996. It initially featured one or two PowerPC G4 processors, but was later switched over to the new PowerPC G5, and now runs on two quad-core Xeon CPUs[1]. The Xserve can be used for a variety of applications, including file server, web server or even high-performance computing applications using clustering - a dedicated cluster Xserve, the Xserve Cluster Node, without a video card and optical drives was also available. If additional hard disk space is needed, its companion external RAID array Xserve RAID can be connected to it via Fibre Channel.

Contents

[edit] Xserve G4

Xserve G4

The original Xserve G4
Second-generation Xserve G4
The second-generation Xserve G4

The Xserve G4 Cluster Node
Type: Rackmounted Server
Developer: Apple Inc.
Released: May 14, 2002
Discontinued: January 6, 2004
Processor(s): single or dual PowerPC G4,
1 - 1.33 GHz

Apple introduced the Xserve on May 14, 2002. Originally, it had one or two PowerPC G4 processors running at 1.0 GHz and supported up to 2 GiB of PC-2100 memory on a 64-bit memory bus. Three FireWire 400 ports (one in front, two in rear), two USB 1.1 ports (rear), an RS-232 management interface (rear), and a single onboard gigabit port (rear) were provided for external connectivity. Two 64-bit/66 MHz PCI slots and one 32-bit/66 MHz PCI/AGP slot were provided; in the default configuration the two PCI slots were filled with an ATI Rage video card and an additional gigabit ethernet card. Up to 4 UATA/100 hard disk drives (60 or 120 GB) fit into hot-swap bays in the front, allowing software RAID-0 and 1 arrays to be created. A tray-loading CD-ROM drive was mounted in the front.

Initially, two configuration options were available: a single-processor Xserve with 256 MiB of memory at $2999 and a dual-processor Xserve with 512 MiB of memory at $3999. Both shipped with a single 60 GB disk and Mac OS X v10.2 "Jaguar" Server.

On February 10, 2003 Apple released an improved and expanded Xserve lineup. Improvements included one or two 1.33 GHz PowerPC G4 processors, two FireWire 800 ports (rear), faster memory (PC-2700), and higher capacity UATA/133 hard disk drives (80 or 160 GB). Also, the front plate was redesigned for a slot-loading CD-ROM. A new model, the Xserve Cluster node was announced at the same price as the single-processor Xserve, featuring two 1.33 GHz processors, no optical drive, a single hard drive bay, no video or ethernet cards, and a 10-client version of "Jaguar" server.

On April 2, 2003 the Xserve RAID was introduced, providing a much higher capacity and higher throughput disk subsystem for the Xserve.

[edit] Xserve G5

Xserve G5

The Xserve G5

The Xserve G5 Cluster Node
Type: Rackmounted Server
Developer: Apple Inc.
Released: January 6, 2004
Processor(s): single or dual PowerPC G5,
2 - 2.3 GHz
Website: apple.com/xserve

On January 6, 2004 Apple introduced the Xserve G5, a redesigned higher-performance Xserve. The 32-bit PowerPC G4s were replaced with one or two 64-bit PowerPC 970 processors running at 2 GHz. Up to 8 GiB of PC-3200 ECC memory was supported on a 128-bit memory bus. One FireWire 400 port (front), two FireWire 800 ports (rear), two USB 2.0 ports (rear), an RS-232 management interface (rear), and two onboard gigabit ethernet ports (rear) with TCP offload provided greater connectivity. A 133 MHz/64-bit and a 100 MHz/64-bit PCI-X slots rounded out its expansion options. Ventilation issues restricted it to 3 SATA hot-swap drive bays (80 or 250 GB each), with the original space for the fourth drive bay used for air vents. The front plate and slot-loading optical drive (CD-ROM, DVD-ROM/CD-RW optional) were retained from the last Xserve G4.

Three configuration options were available: a single-processor Xserve G5 with 512 MiB of memory at $2999, a dual-processor Xserve G5 with 1 GiB of memory at $3999, and a dual-processor cluster node model (with an unchanged appearance from the G4 cluster node) featuring 512 MiB of memory, no optical drive, a single hard drive bay, and a 10-client version of "Panther" Server at $2999.

The higher memory capacity and bandwidth of the Xserve G5 as well as the stronger floating-point performance of the PowerPC 970 made it more suitable for high-performance computing (HPC) applications. System X is one such cluster computer built with Xserves.

On January 3, 2005, Apple speed bumped the Xserve G5 with 2.3 GHz PowerPC 970 processors in the dual-processor configurations. 400 GB hard disks were made available for up to 1.2 TB of internal storage. The slot-loading optical drive was upgraded to a combination DVD-ROM/CD-RW standard, DVD-/+RW optional.

Recently, Apple updated the Xserve and Xserve RAID to allow the use of 500 GB Hard Drives.

Mac OS X v10.4 "Tiger" Server is now available for the Xserve.

[edit] Intel Xserve

Xserve "Xeon"

The Xserve "Xeon"
Type: Rackmounted Server
Developer: Apple Inc.
Released: November 2006
Processor(s): single or dual Xeon 54xx, 2.8 - 3 GHz
Website: apple.com/xserve

The Intel-based Xserves were announced at the Worldwide Developers Conference on August 7, 2006. They use Intel Xeon ('Woodcrest') processors at 2 GHz, 2.66 GHz, or 3 GHz, FB-DIMM DDR2, ATI Radeon X1300 graphics, a maximum storage capacity of 2.25 TB when used with three 750GB drives, optional redundant power supplies and a 1U rack form factor. The Intel Xserves now have their graphics cards on-board, meaning that one does not need to sacrifice a PCI slot to add video capabilities --a departure from G4 and G5 Xserves.

On January 8, 2008 Xserve was updated to use Intel Xeon ('Harpertown') processors at 2.8 GHz or 3 GHz, PC6400 DDR2 memory at 800 MHz, and a maximum storage capacity of 3 TB when used with three 1 TB drives. The front mounted FireWire 400 port featured in previous models was also replaced with a USB 2 port.

Timeline of Macintosh servers

See also: Timeline of Apple Macintosh models

[edit] References

  1. ^ Keynote presentation at the Worldwide Developers Conference, August 7, 2006.

[edit] External links

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