rack servers
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references
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===Multi-node Servers=== |
===Multi-node Servers=== |
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*'''i48 multi-node''' is a server that can be deployed in a 4U chassis with 8 different types of dual-computing nodes to meet computing, PCI-E expansion, storage and other requirements. It supports 100 Gbps EDR/OPA network interfaces |
*'''i48 multi-node''' is a server that can be deployed in a 4U chassis with 8 different types of dual-computing nodes to meet computing, PCI-E expansion, storage and other requirements. It supports 100 Gbps EDR/OPA network interfaces |
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==References== |
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{{reflist}} |
Developer | Inspur Information Inspur Systems |
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Type | GPU Servers Rack-mounted servers Open Computing Servers Multi-node Servers |
Release date | 1993 - Present |
Inspur Server Series is a series of server computers introduced in 1993 by Inspur,[1] an information technology company,[2] and later expanded to the international markets.[3][4] The servers were likely among the first originally manufactured by a Chinese company.[5][6] It is currently developed by Inspur Information and Inspur Systems, Inspur's spinoff companies with the headquarters in San Francisco, California.[7] The product line includes GPU Servers,[8] Rack-mounted servers,[9] Open Computing Servers and Multi-node Servers.[10]
Inspur follows technical standards and protocol specifications of a number of computing organizations, including OIN (Open Invention Network),[22] SPEC (Standard Performance Evaluation Corporation, joined in 2014), OpenStack (joined 2014), OCP Open Compute Project (joined 2017), ODCC (Open Data Center Committee), and Open19.[23][24][25]
*NF5280M5 is Inspur’s new generation general purpose dual socket server with higher claimed scalability, supporting up to 4 GPU cards in 2U, 24 2.5” drive bays and 24 DDR4 DIMM slots, with optimized thermal/cooling design and modular system architecture.[28]