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Has anyone gotten their hands on the new 6000 series appliances yet? If so, what are your thoughts about them? The pricing / performance looks pretty good. I'd like to hear some feedback from anyone who has had a chance to play with them already.
The 6000 series appliances were only available to order from February 1st.
Possible a few people have them in hand now.
Hardware-wise, they are definitely a step up from the previous generation of appliances thanks to Moore's Law
Will these new appliances support the “falcon” cards?
Not 100% sure they will run the Falcon cards, but they are supposed to accept the same Line Cards as the 5000 series.
Likewise they have newer/faster processing cores, but no special ASICs or similar.
Hey @PhoneBoy ,
Are you guys working on nested replies? The current format is making it hard to follow multiple conversations within a thread.
If anyone has gotten their hands on some 6000 series firewalls, could you please run a cat /proc/cpuinfo on them and PM me the results? Curious to see what processors they have and whether they support hyperthreading and/or AES-NI. Thanks!
They must have hyperthreading based on the datasheet.
Great, thanks!
From a CPAP-SG6800-PLUS
processor : 0
vendor_id : GenuineIntel
cpu family : 6
model : 79
model name : Intel(R) Xeon(R) CPU E5-2640 v4 @ 2.40GHz
stepping : 1
cpu MHz : 2394.576
cache size : 25600 KB
physical id : 0
siblings : 20
core id : 0
cpu cores : 10
fpu : yes
fpu_exception : yes
cpuid level : 20
wp : yes
flags : fpu vme de pse tsc msr pae mce cx8 apic sep mtrr pge mca cmov pat pse36 clflush dts acpi mmx fxsr sse sse2 ss h t tm syscall nx pdpe1gb rdtscp lm constant_tsc pni monitor ds_cpl vmx smx est tm2 cx16 xtpr popcnt lahf_lm altmovcr8 misalignsse
bogomips : 4792.86
clflush size : 64
cache_alignment : 64
address sizes : 46 bits physical, 48 bits virtual
power management:
and repeat x20
I'm extremely excited about the release of the 6000 series processors. We were looking at replacing our 4600 cluster and were suggested 5200 or 5400's but I really wanted to jump to the 5600 series so that we'd get the benefits of four cores which allows us to get more optimization in the future by changing the layout of our SND cores if necessary.
The release of the 6500 will allow us to get hyperthreading as well which gives us more opportunity for tuning later as well among other improvements. Although the timing of the release definitely made me expect a newer CPU architecture than the 2016 appliances.
Is there no aes-ni enabled in the BIOS?
CUT>>>
flags : fpu vme de pse tsc msr pae mce cx8 apic sep mtrr pge mca cmov pat pse36 clflush dts acpi mmx fxsr sse sse2 ss ht tm syscall nx pdpe1gb rdtscp lm constant_tsc pni monitor ds_cpl vmx smx est tm2 cx16 xtpr popcnt lahf_lm altmovcr8
<<<CUT
I cann't see any aes cpu flag.
Hmmmm...
AES-NI support is certainly there in Intel's specs for that processor, can't understand why it would be off in the BIOS:
Did anyone find out why AES-NI is turned off? Will this be resolved soon or can it be done somehow by the customer?
Only thing I can figure is that 6000 series is using pretty new processor hardware, and perhaps AES-NI is not yet supported by the Gaia 2.6.18 kernel on that new hardware. If this is the case it is not documented anywhere I can find. Wonder if it is related to this:
Edit: Changed post to reflect that the 6000 series is NOT required to use the new 3.10 kernel with R80.10-R80.30, at least at this time.
It isn't off, AES-NI is being actively utilized but you just can't detect it anymore in R80.40. See sk170779: AES-NI commands no longer work in R80.40
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