Hello Forrest! Full disclosure – I work for Intel and proud to have worked on power and performance aspects of the Intel Xeon code named Haswell . ☺ http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Haswell_(microarchitecture).
From multiple cores, being more power efficient, wider registers, special instructions for cryptography, hardware random number generation support (https://software.intel.com/en-us/articles/intel-digital-random-number-generator-drng-software-implementation-guide) and more, it is a superior server machine. Internally we use Xeons in our data center and in our private clouds. Further, in OpenStack, via the flavor extra specs, your virtual machines can leverage all the platform goodness. For instance, the OpenSSL library runs 6X faster for encryption and 10X faster for decryption on an Intel platform that has AES-NI instruction support. Check out: http://www.intel.com/content/dam/www/public/us/en/documents/white-papers/fast-multi-buffer-ipsec-implementations-ia-processors-paper.pdf For NFV workloads you can leverage CPU pinning, huge page table support and NUMA awareness to ensure great performance. Further, Intel is a major open source contributor to the Linux kernel. Distributions such as Red Hat’s Ubuntu, and Suse all benefit from Intel kernel enhancements that take advantage of our platform capabilities. Our contributions to Xen and KVM ensure that the virtualization overhead is kept to the minimum and we are constantly innovating. Hope that helps. Regards Malini From: Forrest Flagg [mailto:[email protected]] Sent: Monday, April 27, 2015 10:23 AM To: [email protected] Subject: [Openstack] Processors - Intel vs AMD Looking to purchase hardware for a Juno cloud and was wondering what people are using for processors. Is there a preference between Intel vs AMD? Does it make a functional difference? Thanks, Forrest
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