The
Enterprise 10000,
E10k or
Starfire (a development code name also used for marketing purposes) is a high-end multiprocessor data center server capable of being configured with up to 64 UltraSPARC II processors. This was largely designed by
Cray Research's Business Systems Division as a successor to the
Cray Superserver 6400, itself related to Sun's earlier
Sun-4d architecture servers. After Cray was acquired by
Silicon Graphics in 1996, this division was sold on to Sun, who then launched the
Starfire as the
Ultra Enterprise 10000 in 1997. The
Starfire is based around the fault-tolerant
Gigaplane-XB processor/memory interconnect. Like the X000 and X500 series servers, the
Starfire incorporates many high-availability features, including the ability to be partitioned into multiple "domains", each of which can be booted individually to run its own instance of Solaris. It is also possible to remove resources from a running domain with short notice and reassign freed resources to other domains. Domain granularity is one CPU board (single system may have 1-16 of them). A single CPU board can carry up to 4 processors, 4GB of RAM and 4 SBUS IO boards. A rare option is to replace 4 SBUS boards with dual PCI boards. The
Starfire is the first server from any vendor to exceed 2000 on the
TPC-D 300 GB benchmark.
Starfire systems were used by a number of high-profile customers during the "dot-com" boom, notably
eBay, and typically sold for well over $1 million for a fully configured system. The
Starfire contains one or two controller modules which are connected via Ethernet to an external computer, the
System Service Processor (SSP). The controller modules interface with the system "centerplane" via
JTAG and control the partitioning of available CPUs, memory and I/O devices into one or more domains, each of which is in effect a distinct computer. The system cannot be partitioned or booted without its original SSP which contains encrypted keys issued by the manufacturer. An E10K has been preserved at the Computer History Museum in Mountain View. The
Starfire was superseded by the Sun Fire 12K/
15K models. == External links ==