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posted by janrinok on Tuesday August 11 2015, @06:08PM   Printer-friendly
from the biggish-iron dept.

The Platform reports on IBM's updated POWER CPU roadmap. Next year's POWER8+ will add Nvidia's NVLink interconnect to boost bandwidth. POWER9 will move down to a 14nm process node around 2017, and POWER10 will move to 10nm around 2020. A 7nm POWER chip would likely appear around 2023 at the earliest:

The interesting thing about these roadmaps is that the Power8+ processor will come out next year and will have NVLink high-bandwidth interconnects just like the forthcoming "Pascal" GP100 Tesla coprocessor from Nvidia. With NVLink, Nvidia is putting up to four 20 GB/sec ports onto the GPU coprocessor to speed up data transfers between the high bandwidth memory on the GPU cards and to improve the performance of virtual addressing across those devices. With the addition of NVLink ports on the Power8+ processor, those creating hybrid systems will be able to implement virtual memory between the CPU and GPU in an NVLink cluster without having to resort to IBM's Coherent Accelerator Processor Interface (CAPI), which debuted with the Power8 chip last year and which offers similar coherence across a modified PCI-Express link.

[...] We think that IBM could be adding some form of high bandwidth memory to the Power9 chip package, particularly variants aimed at HPC and hyperscale workloads that are not intended for multi-processor systems. But IBM has said nothing about its plans to adopt 3D stacked memory on its processors thus far, even though it has done plenty of fundamental research in this area. We also wonder if IBM will use the process shrink to lower the power consumption of the Power9 chips and perhaps even simplify the cores now that it has officially designated GPUs and FPGAs are coprocessors for the Power line. (Why add vector units if you want to offload to GPUs and FPGAs?)

What is new and interesting on the above roadmap is confirmation that IBM is working on a Power10 processor, which is slated for around 2020 or so and which will be based on the 10 nanometer processes under development at Globalfoundries. With the Power10, as with the Power7, Power8, and Power9 before it, IBM is changing the chip microarchitecture and chip manufacturing process at the same time. This IBM roadmap above does not show a Power9+ or Power10+ kicker, but both could come to pass if the market demands some tweaks to the microarchitecture around half-way between those three-year gaps between Power generations.

IBM's POWER9 chips and Nvidia's Volta GPUs will be featured in Summit and Sierra, two upcoming U.S. Department of Energy supercomputers that will reach 100-300 petaflops.


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  • (Score: 2, Informative) by GDX on Wednesday August 12 2015, @01:34AM

    by GDX (1950) on Wednesday August 12 2015, @01:34AM (#221530)

    Yes and No, the thing is mess of names and relations but starting from Power ISA 2.03 both are the same, to put simply:

    POWER CPU 1 2 3 used their on POWER specification
    POWER CPU 3 and 4 use the PowerPC ISA v2.x
    POWER CPU 5 onward use Power ISA v.2.x

    There are some inaccuracies are the are like that some POWER CPU where conformant with more than one specification or supported some extensions.

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