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SPARCstation 10

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Sun Microsystems workstation computer

SPARCstation 10
Crosfield-badged SPARCstation 10 with monitor
CodenameCampus-2
ManufacturerSun Microsystems
Product familySPARCstation
TypeWorkstation
Release dateMay 19, 1992 (1992-05-19)
AvailabilitySeptember 1992
Introductory priceUS$18,495–57,995
Units soldOver 100,000
Operating system
CPU1–4×SuperSPARCs orhyperSPARCs at 33–50 MHz
Memory16–512 MB
Dimensions41.5 x 41.5 x 7.5 cm
Weight9.5 kg
PredecessorSPARCstation 2
SuccessorSPARCstation 20
SPARCstation 10, rear
SPARCstation 10, side

TheSPARCstation 10 (codenamedCampus-2) is aworkstation computer made bySun Microsystems. Announced on May 19, 1992, the SPARCstation sold for betweenUS$18,495 at the low end to US$57,995 at the high end (equivalent to $41,442–129,949 in 2024).[1] Housed inpizza-box case, the SPARCstation 10 was the first desktop computer capable ofsymmetric multiprocessing from the factory.[2] Sun later replaced it with theSPARCstation 20.

The 40-MHz SPARCstation 10 without external cache was the reference for theSPEC CPU95 benchmark.[3]

Sales

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Volume production commenced on September 1992.[4] By the end of December 1992, the company had shipped over 19,000 SPARCstation 10s, across all models.[5] In 1993, Sun shipped an additional 80,000 units.[6] Between it and its successor theSPARCstation 20, Sun had sold a combined 250,000 units by February 1995.[7]

Specifications

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CPU support

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MBus module for the SPARCstation 10

The SPARCstation 10 (SS10) contains twoMBus slots running at either 36 MHz (33 MHz for the earliest models) or 40 MHz (set via motherboard jumper). Each MBus slot can contain single or dualSPARC CPU modules, permitting expansion to up to four CPUs. BothSuperSPARC andhyperSPARC CPU modules were available. Single SuperSPARC modules without external cache were sold by Sun; they ran at the clock speed of the MBus (uniprocessor Models 20, 30 and 40; dual processor Model 402). Single and a few dual SuperSPARC modules with 1 MB external cache were also sold; they were independently clocked, and ran at a higher rate than the MBus, most commonly 40.3 MHz or 50 MHz (uniprocessor Models 41 and 51; multiprocessor Models 412, 512 and 514). Sun's dual 50 MHz SuperSPARC modules (the only dual MBus modules supported by Sun for this system) were double-width, physically occupying oneSBus slot per module in addition to an MBus slot. SuperSPARC modules with and without external cache could not be mixed. SuperSPARC modules with external cache could be mixed, even with different clock speeds, but this was not a Sun-supported configuration.

Ross hyperSPARC modules were also available from third party vendors.[8] The SS10 had reasonable cooling capacity given the cramped "pizzabox" case, but it was not designed for some of the higher-speed hyperSPARC modules, and so heat issues were common when these modules were used, particularly in four CPU configurations.[9]

Memory

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The SS10 can hold a maximum of 512 MB RAM in eight 200-pin DSIMM slots. 32 MB modules are not supported, though 16 MB and 64 MB are supported.

Disk drives

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The SS10'senclosure can hold two 50-pinSCSIhard drives and afloppy disk drive. Other SCSI devices can be attached via the external SCSI port. There is noATA disk support.

Network support

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There is one onboardEthernet interface, which can be accessed from a built-in10BASE-T jack or via a special 26-pin port that provides bothAUI and audio connections; only one of these network ports can be active at a time. A special cable or adapter is needed to convert the latter port to a standardDA-15 connector.

There are also twoBasic Rate Interface (BRI)ISDN connectors; the system shipped with plastic blocking plugs inserted in these connectors.

Additional SBus network cards can also be added.

Graphics support

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Most SPARCstation 10 systems lack integrated graphics. A very few, referred to as the SPARCstation 10SX, include the SX, or CG14,framebuffer used on theSPARCstation 20, requiring a 4 MB or 8 MB VSIMM to operate. All SPARCstation 10s seem to have the VSIMM slots, a cutout in the case and solder pads for the SX's 13W3 connector. Other options include the CG6 (GX, GX+, Turbo GX and TGX+) 8-bit SBus framebuffers, capable of up to 1280×1024 resolution in 8-bit color, and the ZX (Leo). The ZX is a 24-bit card with hardware-accelerated 3D operations, offering high speeds and resolutions, however, it's poorly supported, takes up two SBus slots, and runs extremely hot. Its faster cousin, the Turbo ZX, requires a fan card, taking up all four SBus slots. Full support is only available inSolaris 2.4 through 2.6, though the 2.6 drivers can be made to work in Solaris 7, 8 and 9. Linux includes an accelerated driver for it which supports 2D acceleration features, but no 3D.NetBSD andOpenBSD support it, but without acceleration, whileNeXTSTEP and OPENSTEP have no support whatsoever.

NVRAM

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The SPARCstation 10 uses a battery-backedNVRAM module to hold data about the system, such as the host ID (serial number) andMAC address. If the battery on the chip dies, then the NVRAM module must be replaced (or modified to use an external battery), and the NVRAM must be reprogrammed with a MAC address and host ID. Optionally a M48T08-100PC1 can be used.[10]

Operating systems

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Sun timeline

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References

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  1. ^Markoff, John (May 19, 1992)."Sun Microsystems to Battle Rivals with New Machines".The New York Times: D4. Archived fromthe original on May 26, 2015.
  2. ^Mueller, Scott; Mark Edward Soper; Barrie Sosinsky (2006).Upgrading and Repairing Servers. Pearson Education. p. 1093.ISBN 9780132796989 – via Google Books.
  3. ^"SPEC CPU95 Q and A".
  4. ^Johnson, Maryfran (October 12, 1992)."Sun Slowed by Overloaded Plate".Computerworld.26 (41). IDG Publications: 1 – via Google Books.
  5. ^Aragon, Lawrence (February 22, 1993)."Contrarian Sun Micro hikes cost of old Sparcs to sell new".The Business Journal.10 (45). American City Business Journals: 1et seq – via Gale.
  6. ^Bozman, Jean S. (July 27, 1994)."Sun: New servers multimedia-ready".Computerworld.28 (26). IDG Publications: 73.ProQuest 216019062 – via Google Books.
  7. ^Staff writer (February 15, 1995)."Sun Gives Aggregate Numbers on Workstation, Solaris Sales".Computergram International. GlobalData: CGN02150014 – via Gale.Sun Microsystems, Inc., says it has now shipped 250,000 SPARCstation 10 and 20s, more than 100,000 SPARCstation 5s, 25,000 symmetric multiprocessing workstations and servers, 10,000 SS1000 servers and 2,200 SS2000s.
  8. ^"Sun4". Archived fromthe original on June 21, 2009. RetrievedFebruary 2, 2006.
  9. ^"The Rough Guide to MBus Modules".
  10. ^"SUN NVRAM/hostid FAQ".
  11. ^"OpenBSD/sparc".

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