tug
Volume 5, Number 5 -- February 7, 2008

Rock and Tukwila Are the Stars of ISSCC This Week

Published: February 7, 2008

by Timothy Prickett Morgan

The two popular chip conferences held each year--the IEEE's International Solid State Circuits Conference in the winter and Stanford University's Hot Chips Conference in the summer--are like debutante balls for advanced microprocessors. This is where chip makers who have been shaping advanced technologies and bringing them to maturity announce them to the world. This week, it is the ISSCC show, and Sun Microsystems, Intel, and IBM are talking about their latest processor designs.

The big star of the ISSC show this week is Sun's "Rock" UltraSparc RK multicore processor, and the presentation put together by Sun shows that it is indeed a 16-core, 32-thread processor. Sun's techies will be showing off a 2.3 GHz version of the chip that has 32 instruction threads from deep out-of-order retirement and sporting a new kind of main memory called transactional memory. The Rock chip also has an additional 32 scout threads--one per instruction stream--that preprocess information before it is dumped into the instruction stream in an effort to boost the efficiency of the chip. The chip that Sun is showing off this week is implemented as a 65 nanometer and has an area of 396 square millimeters. Sun is boasting that the Rock chip will have high performance on both single-threaded and multithreaded applications, which is a neat trick. The move to 65 nanometer processes should allow Sun to eventually get the clock speeds of the Rock chips into the 3 GHz range, but maybe Sun is having issues with this, much as Advanced Micro Devices is having with its quad-core "Barcelona" Opterons, which are going to be about nine months late coming to market when they finally do in volume and without the cache bug that was discovered in them last fall.

Sun is also expected to show off the floating point processing capabilities of the Rock chip, as well as the sophisticated memory arrays, register files, and mainframe-class reliability enhancements in the processor. It is unclear if Sun will confirm the rumors about whether or not the "Supernova" servers using the Rock processors have been pushed out from their promised delivery date of the second half of 2008 by a year. I am working to get someone at Sun to talk to me about this right now. I will also give you the lowdown on transactional memory and what it can do for the future Sparc systems.

Intel is showing off its future "Tukwila" quad-core Itanium processor, which is also expected later this year. According to Intel's presentation, the Tukwila chip will weigh in at over 2 billion transistors and will be implemented in the 65 nanometer, eight-layer process that Intel is in the process of retiring on its Xeon and Core processors as its ramps up its 45 nanometer processes. The Tukwila chips have three times the transistors of the current "Montvale" dual-core Itanium 9000s and are 700 square millimeters in size. Each of the four cores on the Tukwila chip has HyperThreading, giving each chip eight instruction threads, and 30 MB of L3 cache memory on the chip, up from 24 MB on the Montvale and "Montecito" dual-core Itanium 9000 chips. Intel is also showing off its HyperTransport-alike interconnect for processors, memory, and I/O called QuickPath, which Intel says will enable processor-to-processor bandwidth of 96 GB/sec and peak memory bandwidth of 34 GB/sec. The Tukwila chips are expected to range from 1.2 GHz to 2 GHz in speed and offer about twice the performance of the current 1.66 GHz Montvales. The chips are apparently quite hot--apparently as high as 170 watts--which begs the question as to why Intel is not implementing Tukwila in 45 nanometer technology to shrink it and let it run cooler at the same clock speeds or even higher. Shrinking a big chip is not easy, however, and manufacturing processes are tied pretty tightly to a chip design so changing one affects the other. That means you can't just throw the Tukwila design on the board and shrink it to 45 nanometers in a day.

Intel's techies are also expected to outline voltage-frequency scaling techniques that allow the Tukwila chip to operate at lower voltages and therefore consume less power.

IBM is expected to detail the work its Microelectronics division is doing as it transitions its "Cell" Broadband Engine variant of the Power architecture from a 65 nanometer silicon-on-insulator (SOI) process to a 45 nanometer SOI process. The Cell chips, which run a bit hot because they are so large but which have lots of adjunct processors that allow them to provide stellar computational and graphics performance, could use such a shrink to be more useful and maybe to boost performance. IBM says that the shrink on the Cell chips cuts the chip area by 34 percent and power consumption by 40 percent, presumably at the same clock speed.

Tilera, the startup chip maker that launched a 64-core processor last summer at the Hot Chips event, is talking up the Tile64 chip at ISSCC this week. The Tile64 processor is not based on an existing instruction set, such as X86 or MIPS, but rather on a whole new instruction set that is geared for low power and designed to run a homegrown variant of Linux tuned for the architecture. Hitachi and Waseda University in Japan are showing off an eight-core 600 MHz system-on-a-chip design they put together and created a parallelizing compiler for that can deliver 33.6 gigaflops of number-crunching performance. It is not clear if this chip is based on Hitachi's Super-H RISC instruction set, but it probably is.


RELATED STORIES

Tilera Launches 64-Core, Linux-Based Mesh Processor

Schwartz Blogs a Bit About the Dud Rock Chip on His Desk

Chip Makers Strut Their Stuff at ISSCC

IBM to Ditch SRAM for Embedded DRAM on Power CPUs

Sun Details Server Chip Roadmaps at Analyst Summit

Power6 Gets Second Silicon, IBM to Crank the Clock

IBM Talks Power5 at Hot Chips Conference



                     Post this story to del.icio.us
               Post this story to Digg
    Post this story to Slashdot


Sponsored By
ARKEIA

UNIX BACKUP SOLUTIONS

Award-winning
Arkeia Network Backup
for enterprises and SMBs with
heterogeneous networks.

Supports AIX, HP-UX, Solaris and Linux

Hot backup of open databases including Oracle, DB2,
Lotus, MySQL, LDAP
and MS-Exchange.

30-day demo with FREE install support!

www.arkeia.com


Editor: Timothy Prickett Morgan
Contributing Editors: Dan Burger, Joe Hertvik,
Shannon O'Donnell, Timothy Prickett Morgan
Publisher and Advertising Director: Jenny Thomas
Advertising Sales Representative: Kim Reed
Contact the Editors: To contact anyone on the IT Jungle Team
Go to our contacts page and send us a message.

Sponsored Links

COMMON:  Join us at the annual 2008 conference, March 30 - April 3, in Nashville, Tennessee
Vision Solutions:  Disaster Recovery Protection for AIX. Fast. Easy. Affordable. Catch the Webcast!
NowWhatJobs.net:  NowWhatJobs.net is the resource for job transitions after age 40


 

IT Jungle Store Top Book Picks

Getting Started with PHP for i5/OS: List Price, $59.95
The System i RPG & RPG IV Tutorial and Lab Exercises: List Price, $59.95
The System i Pocket RPG & RPG IV Guide: List Price, $69.95
The iSeries Pocket Database Guide: List Price, $59.00
The iSeries Pocket Developers' Guide: List Price, $59.00
The iSeries Pocket SQL Guide: List Price, $59.00
The iSeries Pocket Query Guide: List Price, $49.00
The iSeries Pocket WebFacing Primer: List Price, $39.00
Migrating to WebSphere Express for iSeries: List Price, $49.00
iSeries Express Web Implementer's Guide: List Price, $59.00
Getting Started with WebSphere Development Studio for iSeries: List Price, $79.95
Getting Started With WebSphere Development Studio Client for iSeries: List Price, $89.00
Getting Started with WebSphere Express for iSeries: List Price, $49.00
WebFacing Application Design and Development Guide: List Price, $55.00
Can the AS/400 Survive IBM?: List Price, $49.00
The All-Everything Machine: List Price, $29.95
Chip Wars: List Price, $29.95


 
The Four Hundred
Entry System p Servers Get Power6 Chips, System i Boxes Await

The Power6 Server Ramp: Better Than Expected

IBM Takes System i Disk Clustering Up a Notch with HASM

The X Factor: Survive, Adapt, Repeat

i5/OS V5R3 Support Ends in April 2009

The Linux Beacon
Novell Taps Zonker to Manage openSUSE Project

Novell Partners with SNA to Make Mainframe Linux Easier

IBM Gets Power6 Chips into Entry System p Servers

The X Factor: Survive, Adapt, Repeat

High Voltage DC Systems for Data Centers Cut Power Use

Four Hundred Stuff
New Web Console Debuts with i5/OS V6R1

RPG to .NET Reduces Maintenance Pain, Adds Rich User Interface

IBM Makes DB2 Web Query More Affordable

Bug Busters' HA Offering Gets Role Swap Function

Security Vulnerability Reported in i5/OS

Big Iron
Novell Partners with SNA to Make Mainframe Linux Easier

Top Mainframe Stories From Around the Web

Chats, Webinars, Seminars, Shows, and Other Happenings

Four Hundred Guru
Setting Up A PHP/Web Environment On System i: Where Do I Start?

Don't Let SQL Name Your Baby

A Checklist For Moving System i Boxes

System i PTF Guide
February 2, 2008: Volume 10, Number 5

January 26, 2008: Volume 10, Number 4

January 19, 2008: Volume 10, Number 3

January 12, 2008: Volume 10, Number 2

January 5, 2008: Volume 10, Number 1

December 29, 2007: Volume 9, Number 52

The Windows Observer
Free At Last: Microsoft Ships Windows Server 2008

Microsoft Offers $44.6 Billion for Yahoo!

High Voltage DC Systems for Data Centers Cut Power Use

The X Factor: Survive, Adapt, Repeat

VMware Revs Desktop Virtualization Offerings

Four Hundred Monitor
Four Hundred Monitor's
Full iSeries Events Calendar

THIS ISSUE SPONSORED BY:

MKS
Arkeia
Roaring Penguin
Guild Companies
Vibrant Technologies


Printer Friendly Version


TABLE OF CONTENTS
The Power6 Server Ramp: Better Than Expected

Rock and Tukwila Are the Stars of ISSCC This Week

Who Needs a Web Application Firewall?

The X Factor: Survive, Adapt, Repeat

High Voltage DC Systems for Data Centers Cut Power Use

But Wait, There's More:

Sun Formally Launches Project Blackbox Data Centers . . . LTO-5 On Course for 2009 . . . SAP Reports Solid Results for 2007, Aims for Repeat in 2008 . . . FalconStor Debuts New VTL Release . . . Reigning In IT Chaos is the Goal of Innotas . . .

The Unix Guardian

BACK ISSUES





 
Subscription Information:
You can unsubscribe, change your email address, or sign up for any of IT Jungle's free e-newsletters through our Web site at http://www.itjungle.com/sub/subscribe.html.

Copyright © 1996-2008 Guild Companies, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
Guild Companies, Inc., 50 Park Terrace East, Suite 8F, New York, NY 10034

Privacy Statement