| Intel Xeon E5-2400 and E5-2600 Explained |
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| October 2012 | |
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Intel Xeon E5 processors are available in a large variety of models and
this article attempts to assist system administrators and architects by
identifying and clarifying the exact differences. As of today, Intel has launched the following models this year:
Understanding the model numbers for the "Xeon E5-xxxx" family:
The performance/price sweet spot for most servers is probably the Xeon E5-2400 series and E5-2600 series. On the surface their technical specifications are very similar but in fact the E5-2400 series is intentionally crippled performance-wise and are sold at a lower price point compared to the E5-2600 series. Let's look at an example: ![]() The difference is in the QPI link, maximum memory support, main memory bandwidth and the number of PCI-Express lanes supported for add-on cards. The Intel Quick Path Interconnect (QPI) is the link between two Xeon E5 processors on a Dual Socket server - it replaces the old Front Side Bus and competes with AMD's HyperTransport link. The E5-2620 has 2 x QPI links which gives us a bandwidth of 115.2 GB/s. The E5-2420 on the other hand has a single QPI link which gives us 57.6 GB/s - exactly half. The main memory bandwidth is also crippled in the 2400-series - it has a Triple Channel memory architecture (32 GB/s) versus a Quad Channel architecture (42.6 GB/s) in the 2600-series family. Our team provides consultancy, system design, building and testing services to all our partners. Feel free to contact us for further information. |

