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Windows Server Platform: Overview and Roadmap

Windows Server Platform: Overview and Roadmap . Sean McGrane Program Manager Windows Server Platform Architecture Group smcgrane @ microsoft.com Microsoft Corporation. Session Outline. Server Hardware Trends Technology and Processor Trends Form Factors: Blade Servers

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Windows Server Platform: Overview and Roadmap

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  1. Windows Server Platform:Overview and Roadmap Sean McGrane Program Manager Windows Server Platform Architecture Groupsmcgrane @ microsoft.com Microsoft Corporation

  2. Session Outline • Server Hardware Trends • Technology and Processor Trends • Form Factors: Blade Servers • Windows Longhorn Server Direction • Reliability • Hardware error handling • Hardware partitioning • Application Consolidation • Virtualization • Call to Action • Resources

  3. Server Technology Trends • Processors • More processing units per physical package • In this presentation 1P means one physical processor • Point-to-point bus architecture • Direct attached memory • Memory – capacity continues to increase • Memory technology is a feature of the processor • Fully Buffered DIMM (FBD) by 2007/2008 • I/O – moves to PCI Express • Increased IO bandwidth and reliability • Firmware • Increased adoption of Extensible Firmware Interface (EFI) • Platforms • Increased adoption of blades for 1P/2P application loads • Scale up moves to the commodity space • Large number of processing units on high-end servers (256 or more)

  4. Processor Trends Performance capability of today’s x86 8P server AS AS Pipeline/ Caches WindowsLonghorn Server Server 2003 Compute Cluster Edition Server 2003 SP1 Higher number of cores per processor All new server processors are 64-bit capable Core Core Core Core Performance Cache Dual Core Dual Thread Quad Core Core Core Cache Time

  5. What will customers do with Multi-Core? • Typical application scaling can’t keep up • 1P and 2P servers are often under utilized today • Future 1P servers will be more compute capable than today’s 8P • Few customer loads fully utilize an 8P server today • Application consolidation will be the volume solution • Multiple application loads deployed to each processor • Scale up apps can be accommodated on volume servers • How will form factors be affected? • IO & memory capability must match compute capability • IO expansion isn't available in today's volume server form factors • Larger form factors may be required for these servers • Can RAS scale with performance? • Consolidation and scale-up apps raise RAS requirements • Mid- to high-end RAS features are needed on volume servers

  6. Typical Blade Platform Today IDE Drive IDE Drive IDE Drive IDE Drive 1GBE NIC 1GBE NIC 1GBE NIC 1GBE NIC CPU CPU CPU CPU Chipset Chipset Chipset Chipset IDE Drive IDE Drive IDE Drive IDE Drive 1GBE NIC 1GBE NIC 1GBE NIC 1GBE NIC CPU CPU CPU CPU Fiber Channel Daughter Card Fiber Channel Daughter Card Fibre Channel Daughter Card Fiber Channel Daughter Card Memory Memory Memory Memory Chassis midplane • Current models are typically 6U to 7U chassis with 10 to 14 1P/2P x64 blades • Each blade is like a server motherboard • IDE/SCSI attached disks, network and IO Daughter card on the blade • Midplane is passive; routing is very complex; IO switches provided in the chassis • SAN attached rate is high, ~40% • Initial problems with adoption • Costs were too high • Limited vendor network switches available • Data center infrastructure not ready, cabling, management, power, etc • Aggregated server management potential not achieved • Proprietary interfaces to the management module • Static blade configuration • OS state on the blade complicates repurposing Compute Blades Network switches FC switches Chassis Management Module (CMM)

  7. Future Blade Platform CPU CPU CPU CPU PCIe Chipset PCIE PCIE PCIE Chipset Chipset Chipset CPU CPU CPU CPU Memory Memory Memory Memory • Similar chassis configuration, e.g. 6U to 7U chassis with 10 to 14 1P/2P x64 blades • The compute blade becomes stateless • All IO and direct attached disks are removed • Consolidated storage on FC or iSCSI SAN • More reliable storage solution, reduces cost and simplifies management • Simplifies blade failover and repurposing • The chassis contains a set of configurable components • The midplane is PCIe only and contains a programmable PCIe switch • All IO devices and switches are at the far end of the midplane • The CMM programs the PCIe switch to assign IO to compute blades, i.e. configure servers • Aggregated server management potential is realized • Standardized management interfaces implemented in the CMM • Flexible and dynamic configuration of blade servers • Simplified server repurposing on error; Failed components can be configured out Compute Blades Chassis midplane Network IO/switches FC IO/switches Switch Chassis Management Module (CMM)

  8. Blade Support - Remote Boot • Microsoft supports remote boot with Server 2003 • Supported for both FC and iSCSI SAN • SAN boot requires a Host Bus Adapter (HBA) • Windows install processes work with this configuration • iSCSI creates a new low end SAN market • Software initiated install and boot is complex • A low-cost HBA is a simpler approach • Enables faster time to market solution • Provides a solution for exiting OSs, e.g. Server 2003 • SAN management is too complex • Must be simplified to create a volume solution • Simple SAN program addresses this simplification • Packaged SAN solutions with a single point of management • Initial focus is simplifying SAN deployment • SAN boot simplification is a longer term goal

  9. Power and Cooling • Processor power ratings and server density continue to rise • High-end processors will have 130W footprint • Blade servers can populate up to 168 procs per rack • Existing data center infrastructure can’t cope • At 65-95W per sq foot, can supply about 6-7KW per rack • A single fully loaded blade chassis can be rated at >5KW • Power management can help • Processor p-states supported in Server 2003 SP1 • Balances power consumption to real time utilization • Transparent to the user and applications • Can lower processor power consumption up to 30% • More is needed, new power initiatives are emerging • More efficient power supplies with monitoring capability • Silicon advances to reduce processor power leakage • Tools to accurately rate server power • Power and cooling are a huge customer problem • Power management alone can't solve the problem • Upgrades to legacy data center infrastructure will be required

  10. Longhorn Server Platform Direction • Move the industry to 64-bit (x64) Windows • Compatibility for 32-bit apps on x64 • Broad coverage for 64-bit drivers • Enable Windows on Itanium for scale up solutions • Consolidate multiple applications per server • Homogeneous consolidation for file, print, web, email, etc • Virtualization for heterogeneous low to mid-scale application loads • Hardware partitions for heterogeneous scale up application loads • Improve Reliability, Availability, and Serviceability • Hardware error handling infrastructure • Enhanced error prediction and redundant hardware features • Continue progress on Windows performance • Improved support for Windows operation on an iSCSI or FC SAN

  11. Windows Hardware Error Architecture (WHEA) • Motivation - Improve reliability of the server • Consolidation raises server RAS requirements • Server 2003 bugcheck analysis: • ~10% are diagnosed as hardware errors • Others exhibit corruption that could be hardware related • Hardware errors are a substantial problem on server • Silent hardware errors are a big concern • OS participation in error handling is inconsistent • Improved OS integration can raise server RAS level • Goals • Provide information for all hardware error events • Make the information available to management software • Reduce mean time to recovery for fatal errors • Enable preventative maintenance using health monitoring • Reduce crashes using error prediction and recovery • Utilize standards based hardware, e.g. PCIe AER

  12. WHEA – The Problem • Lack of coordinated hardware error handling • Disparate error sources with distinct mechanisms • Error signaling and processing is architecture specific • Poor I/O error handling capability; improved with PCIe AER • Lack of OS integration lowers server RAS • Lack of a common data format restricts OS participation • No mechanism to discover error sources • Some hardware errors are not reported to the OS • No way to effectively utilize platform-specific capabilities • WHEA is a common hardware error handling infrastructure for Windows • Error source identification, configuration and management • Common hardware error flow in Windows • Platform driver model to provide hardware/firmware abstraction • Common hardware error record format for all platforms • Standard interface to persist error records • Hardware error events provided to management software

  13. Dynamic Hardware Partitioning (DHP) … … … … Core Core Core Core Core Core Core Core Cache Cache Cache Cache IO Bridge IO Bridge IO Bridge IO Bridge Longhorn dynamic hardware partitioning features are focused on improving server RAS Memory Memory Memory Memory Service Processor . . . . . . . . . . . . Partition Manager PCI Express Future Hardware Partitionable Server 1. Partition Manager provides the UI for partition creation and management 2. Service Processor controls the inter processor and IO connections 3. Hardware partitioning to the socket level. Virtualization for sub socket partitioning 4. Support for dynamic hardware addition and replacement in Longhorn Server

  14. DHP – Hot Addition • Addition of hardware to a running partition with no downtime • Processors, memory and IO subsystems may be added • Scenarios supported by Hot Addition • Expansion of server compute resources • Addition of I/O extension units • Enable unused capacity in the server • Hot Addition sequence • Hardware is physically plugged into the server • Administrator or management software initiates a Hot Addition • The firmware initiates an ACPI Hot Add notify to the OS in the partition • The OS reads the ACPI tables and utilizes the unit described by the notify • Operations are not transparent to applications or device drivers • A notification API will be made available for both user and kernel mode • Drivers cannot assume hardware resources are static • Units are added permanently • To subsequently remove the unit requires a reboot of the partition

  15. DHP – Hot Replace • A processor/memory unit is replaced with a redundant spare • Implemented with no OS downtime • The details of the Hot Replace sequence are being defined • System requirements • One or more spare units in the server • Hardware assistance can improve efficiency of the swap process • Scenarios supported with no downtime • Replacement of a unit initiated by hardware failure prediction • Replacement of a unit by service engineers during maintenance • Hot Replace sequence • Administrator or management software initiates a Hot Replace • A spare unit is brought online and mapped into the partition view • FW initiates an ACPI replace notify to the OS which identifies the unit • The context of the unit to be replaced is migrated to the spare unit • The OS provides notification once the operation is completed • Firmware maps out the replaced hardware without interruption to the OS • The OS completes the initialization of the new processors and continues • The operation is transparent to applications and device drivers

  16. Microsoft View on Partitioning • Used for server consolidation • Server consolidation: hosting multiple application loads on a single server • Microsoft offers homogeneous consolidation programs for: • File, print, email, web, database, etc • Heterogeneous side by side application execution is problematic • Applications tend to collide with each other • Testing is required to validate different application combinations • Partitioning offers out of the box server consolidation solutions • Hardware Partitions • High levels of isolation and reliability with low perf overhead • Ideal for scale up application consolidation • Granularity of hardware is large; Removal of hardware is very complex • Software Partitions (Virtualization) • Preferred direction for application consolidation • Flexible partition configuration; granular dynamic Resource Management • Ideal solution for consolidation of volume Windows applications • Future Direction • Provide a hypervisor based virtualization solution • Expand the application environments supported under virtualization • Hardware partitions used for scale up application consolidation

  17. Virtualization and Hardware Partitions Volume 32-bit application solution Out of the box consolidation Heterogeneous OS/App consolidation Supported on standard servers Highly flexible and configurable solution 64-bit Host support with VS 2005 SP1 Host OS model not preferred forproduction deployment Hardware partitioning provides physical isolation Software partitions may be used within a hardware partition Enables software partitions and scale up application consolidation on a single server Requires partitionable hardware Software Partitions using Virtual Server (VS) 2005 Hardware Partitions App App App App App App NT4 Win2K Win2K3 Win2K3 NT4 Win2K Virtual Server Virtual Server App Windows Host OS Windows Host OS Win2K3 Windows compliant partitionable server Windows compliant server

  18. Virtualization Futures • OS virtualization layer replaced by a thinner hypervisor layer • Significant reduction in performance overhead and maintenance • Mutli-processor support in the guest environment • 64-bit hypervisor to enable scaling • Devices can be assigned to a partition • Requires isolation protection support in the hardware (IO Virtualization) • Partitions can share assigned device resource with other partitions • Higher levels of reliability and availability • Snapshot of guest environment with no downtime enables high availability solutions • WHEA provides hardware health monitoring and higher levels of RAS • Guests can be moved between physical servers with no downtime • Granular and dynamic management of hardware resources • Management becomes a key differentiator in this environment • Enables heterogeneous high-availability and legacy production application consolidation on a non-hardware partitioned server App App App App App App Win2K Win2K3 Win2K3 Longhorn Win2K3 Win2K Hypervisor Windows compliant server Storage Storage Network Storage Storage Network

  19. Call to Action • Server vendors • Consider the effect of multi core on volume servers • Consider hardware partitions on mid range servers • Provide management flexibility in blade chassis • Implement power saving technologies • Provide WHEA extensions to improve server RAS • Implement dynamic hardware partitioning features to improve RAS • Implement emerging virtualization hardware assists • Device vendors • Provide 64-bit drivers for all devices • Validate compatibility in a dynamic hardware environment • ISVs – hardware management • Implement to emerging standards based management interfaces • Provide flexible blade chassis management • Utilize emerging power management standards • Provide enhanced RAS features based on WHEA information

  20. Community Resources • Windows Hardware & Driver Central (WHDC) • www.microsoft.com/whdc/default.mspx • Technical Communities • www.microsoft.com/communities/products/default.mspx • Non-Microsoft Community Sites • www.microsoft.com/communities/related/default.mspx • Microsoft Public Newsgroups • www.microsoft.com/communities/newsgroups • Technical Chats and Webcasts • www.microsoft.com/communities/chats/default.mspx • www.microsoft.com/webcasts • Microsoft Blogs • www.microsoft.com/communities/blogs

  21. Resources • Blades and SAN • Storage track - Storage Platform leadership • Storage track – Simplifying SAN deployments on Windows • Networking track - Implementing convergent networking • Networking track - Network IO Architectures • http://www.microsoft.com/windowsserversystem/storage/simplesan.mspx • Reliability - Fundamentals track • Windows Error Hardware Architecture (WHEA) • Error management solutions synergy with WHEA • Dynamic Hardware Partitioning • Virtualization • Server track – Virtual Server Overview and Roadmap • Fundamentals track – Windows Virtualization Architecture • Fundamentals track – Virtualization Technology for AMD Architecture • Fundamentals track – Virtualization Technology for Intel Architecture • http://www.microsoft.com/windowsserversystem/virtualserver/default.mspx

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