Now that I have seen the problem for two sockets, it made me wonder what the manufacturers did for 4 socket motherboard designs. Easy enough to find out. A Google Image search for:
"quad socket" motherboard shows: some took air flow into account, and some didn't. There are quad socket motherboards with the sockets in rectangular arrangements, so that air cooling all of those equally in a 1U or 2U case is going to be really hard, and probably it just isn't done. Water cooling would work, or in a 3U or 4U air cooling by snaking in ducts, but either way it would be a PITA. Then there are other motherboards where air flow was clearly taken into account, and the sockets are lined up so that they are not in each other's air flow. Or at least not much. This one there might be a tiny bit of overlap right at the edge of the heat sinks: http://www.tyan.com/product_SKU_spec.aspx?ProductType=MB&pid=670&SKU=600000180 That would be easy enough to handle by redirecting the hot air a few millimeters to the side with a small plastic "wall". In other designs they line the sockets up straight across the board, so that there is no way for one CPU to "breathe" the hot air from another: http://www.zdnet.co.uk/reviews/sme-servers/2010/06/25/dell-poweredge-r810-40089356/ That Poweredge case looked pretty long, so I checked the specs and it was 72 cm, which was 7 cm longer than the longest 2U case in any of my racks. (And only 2 cm longer than some old dead dual motherboard 1U cases from Racksaver that have not yet gone to recycling. Yes, those really had two motherboards in them, one behind the other.) Being Dell they may have gone with a nonstandard motherboard form factor. Standards are for the little guys! At the other end of the spectrum, in the "what were they thinking?" category, there are 2 socket designs like this one (where the manufacturer only recommends a 4U case, with active heatsinks): http://www.supermicro.com/Aplus/motherboard/Opteron4100/SR56x0/H8DCL-6.cfm This definitely points up one advantage of more cores/socket - it is easier to cool all the cores equally if there are fewer sockets. There is also the blade approach, but that is a whole different ballgame in terms of price versus the more generic rack servers. Regards, David Mathog mat...@caltech.edu Manager, Sequence Analysis Facility, Biology Division, Caltech _______________________________________________ Beowulf mailing list, Beowulf@beowulf.org sponsored by Penguin Computing To change your subscription (digest mode or unsubscribe) visit http://www.beowulf.org/mailman/listinfo/beowulf