This paper describes the system packaging of the processor cage for the IBM eServer z900. This server contains the world's most complex multichip module (MCM), with a wiring length of 1 km and a maximum power of 1300 W on a glass-ceramic substrate. The z900 MCM contains 35 chips comprising the heart of the central electronic complex (CEC) of this server. This MCM was implemented using two different glass-ceramic technologies: one an MCM-D technology (using thin film and glass-ceramic) and the other a pure MCM-C technology (using glass-ceramic) with more aggressive wiring ground rules. In this paper we compare these two technologies and describe their impact on the MCM electrical design. Similarly, two different board technologies for the housing of the CEC are discussed, and the impact of their electrical properties on the system design is described. The high-frequency requirements of this design due to operating frequencies of 918 MHz for on-chip and 459 MHz for off-chip interconnects make a comprehensive design methodology and post-routing electrical verification necessary. The design methodology, including the wiring strategy needed for its success, is described in detail in the paper.
In this paper, we describe the challenging first-and secondlevel packaging technology of a new system packaging architecture for the IBM eServer z990. The z990 dramatically increases the volumetric processor density over that of the predecessor z900 by implementing a super-blade design comprising four node cards. Each blade is plugged into a common center board, and a blade contains the node with up to sixteen processor cores on the multichip module (MCM), up to 64 GB of memory on two memory cards, and up to twelve self-timed interface (STI) cables plugged into the front of the node. Each glass-ceramic MCM carries 16 chips dissipating a maximum power of 800 W. In this super-blade design, the packaging complexity is increased dramatically over that of the previous zSeries eServer z900 to achieve increased volumetric density, processor performance, and system scalability. This approach permits the system to be scaled from one to four nodes, with full interaction between all nodes using a ring structure for the wiring between the four nodes. The processor frequencies are increased to 1.2 GHz, with a 0.6-GHz nest with synchronous double-data-rate interchip and interblade communication. This data rate over these package connections demands an electrical verification methodology that includes all of the different relevant system components to ensure that the proper signal and power distribution operation is achieved. The signal integrity analysis verifies that crosstalk limits are not exceeded and proper timing relationships are maintained. The power integrity simulations are performed to optimize the hierarchical decoupling in order to maintain the voltage on the power distribution networks within prescribed limits.
This paper describes architectures and significant implementation features of two systems in the IBM POWER8i processor-based family of servers. Specifically, the scale-out 2-socket rack server and the enterprise scale-up 16-socket rack server are detailed. The description of these systems highlights the increase in memory bandwidth from previous POWER A systems, the enablement of coherent accelerators, the highly-extensible I/O subsystem, and the high-performance directly attached storage subsystem. In addition, reliability, availability, and serviceability features are described. These systems deliver significant increases in core count, memory, and input/output bandwidth over previous POWER systemsVwith reliability and availability enhancements commensurate with the performance improvements.
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