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Today marks the one year anniversary of Intel and Sun joining together in collaboration to improve the Solaris operating system, among other things. Here's the way I tell it to people: "We're working to make Xeon the best platform to run Solaris."
One year into our collaboration marks a great time to review what we have done together so far in our joint development work to make Xeon/Solaris great. All of these would have been *impossible* without serious collaborative work with Sun. (And incidentally, it's a lot of fun for us to work with the experts in this community).
Well, I'm sure I'm forgetting a lot, but this came off the top of my head today. And of course for this year, I'm staring at a long list of things we're doing to make sure our 2008 processors (Nehalem and friends) are supported right out of the chute on OpenSolaris.
I hope this doesn't sound like bragging or boasting here – I am really extraordinarily proud of the Intel team and the people we have worked with at Sun and other places in the OpenSolaris community to make this project great. Thanks all for a great year and for a fantastic 2008!
By stevel on January 22nd, 2008 at 7:55 pm
Wow awesome. I knew the partnership was producing stuff - but to see it listed out point for point is pretty amazing. You guys have done some incredible work. Nice job.
By Lee Hepler on January 22nd, 2008 at 8:18 pm
I hope Intel engineers are also working on support for Intel chip sets. I will be upgrading my hardware this weekend to an X38 based motherboard and a E8400 processor. It will be a bummer to wait for several months to run Solaris on this system if it doesn't run yet. Intel wants open source developers to use their platforms and most of us use the desktop chips and chip sets. I must admit this is only my second Intel build (not counting the Z80 systems) with the first being a DX2-66 machine. I've been running AMD ever since the Pentium first came out but Intel has done such a briliant job on the new CPU's that I just couldn't resist. Too bad they delayed the Quad cores. I wanted the extra cores so I could run 2 or three OS's at once to learn more about virtualization.
Lee Hepler
By Jim Grisanzio on January 23rd, 2008 at 12:23 am
cool. congrats.
By Glynn Foster on January 23rd, 2008 at 1:36 am
Awesome list - congrats Dave on all the hard work you and your team have done. Very cool to know that you guys are a strong part of the OpenSolaris community.
By David Stewart (Intel) on January 23rd, 2008 at 2:20 pm
To Lee Hepler -
> Hope you have a good experience with your X38 / E8400.
> For such new hardware, I would recommend that you go with OpenSolaris rather than Solaris 10.
> We're definitely working on enabling new chipset technologies.
> I just talked to someone who is running OpenSolaris build 80, and it's running great on a X38 with the E8400 processor.
By Rayson on January 24th, 2008 at 12:11 pm
Very nice!!
By Happy Aether Bunny on January 28th, 2008 at 12:35 am
As of last night: E8400 + Intel DQ35JO + 8Gb + b79 = works.
b70 suicided in the boot loader, b79 had no such problems,
onboard graphics didn't like the 1920x1200 monitor so I ended up using any old nvidia.
no sound ^^;
I do wish the intel bios would allow you to move that 750mb of junk out of the way, it feels like I'm wasting half a DIMM.
By Rick (Vectorpedia) on January 28th, 2008 at 4:00 am
Intel and Sun was a great marriage........keep up the good work !
By Vijay Tatkar on January 29th, 2008 at 9:45 am
Great blog, Dave. Working with you in this year has been one of the high points of this relationship.
On the compiler side, we've made tremendous strides with Core2 instruction selection and tuning, which resulted in HUGE SPECfp increases. As noted here:
http://blogs.sun.com/tatkar/entry/sun_studio_12_patch_performance
Similar results with the now tuned Sun Performance Library as well.
Onward, to even bigger and better things. Not only is there accomplishments of the past year, but theres wonderful momentum built up as well.
Cheers! Awesome work, Intel!
By David Stewart (Intel) on January 29th, 2008 at 9:52 am
Congratulations, Vijay! I'm very impressed with the progress you have made on SPECfp and I'm looking forward to more and better things with the premier compiler for Solaris/Xeon.
By Jonathan Schwartz's Weblog on January 30th, 2008 at 7:18 am
from the volume leader in PC's and commodity infrastructure matters to our customers. Michael joined me on stage, and politely invited me to join Dell's “Regeneration” (an offer I gladly accepted in exchange for a t-shirt). Dell joins IBM andIntelas Solaris OEM partners. Personally, I'd love to add Hewlett Packard to the list of partners our customers can rely upon for Solaris support. We saw double digit growth in emerging economies, from India, China, Latin America, to portions of Eastern
By Jonathan Schwartz's Weblog : Weblog on February 14th, 2008 at 10:24 am
r unsere Kunden. Michael kam mit aufs Podium und lud mich netterweise zu Dells „Regeneration“ ein (und wer kann dazu schon Nein sagen, besonders wenn es dazu ein Gratis-T-Shirt gibt?). Dell tritt an die Seite der Solaris OEM-Partner IBM undIntel. Ich würde gerne auch Hewlett Packard auf der Liste der Partner sehen, bei denen unsere Kunden Unterstützung für Solaris erhalten können. In den aufstrebenden Märkten erzielten wir ein zweistelliges Wachstum
By IBRAHIM FAGGE on March 12th, 2008 at 2:04 am
such joint togetherness is an important mark up point in this IT Era.
By Intel® Software Network Blogs » Making access to memory faster in OpenSolaris (and Core2) on April 4th, 2008 at 3:55 pm
[...] have been working so hard over the last year plus on implementing new Intel technologies into OpenSolaris and supporting new processors and [...]
By Planet OpenSolaris on April 4th, 2008 at 5:48 pm
We have been working so hard over the lastyear pluson implementing new Intel technologies into OpenSolaris and supporting new processors and platforms, it’s good to stop for a moment and consider how we are speeding up the product you have in your hands today. (Or, you really *ought* to have your