Intel preps interconnect for server CPUs

Intel preps interconnect for server CPUs


SAN JOSE, Calif. – Intel Corp. is not providing details, but it has disclosed plans that confirm industry speculation of recent weeks: The x86 giant is developing a next-generation interconnect it will integrate in future Xeon and Atom server processors addressing a range of uses from supercomputers to microservers.

The news is timed to compete with an announcement later on Monday (Sept. 10) from Advanced Micro Devices about the Freedom Fabric it acquired with startup SeaMicro. AMD is expected to try to make that interconnect an industry standard for its server CPUs, and probably those of emerging ARM-based server SoCs.

Interconnects--sometimes called fabrics--are key to linking tens to hundreds of thousands of processors in a broad range of servers. They are used in everything from the world’s most powerful supercomputers to large cloud computing data centers and microservers, dense chassis packed with processors generally used as Web servers.

The industry has been anticipating an Intel move into interconbnects after three recent acquisitions. In April, Intel bought an interconnect group from Cray for $140 million. In January, it acquired the Infiniband chip business of QLogic for $125 million, and in July 2011 it bought Fulcrum for an undisclosed sum.

“We are putting a salable fabric into the processor using the assets we have with our recent acquisitions,” said Raj Hazra, general manager of Intel’s technical computing group. “We think this integration happens much sooner than end of decade as some people have suggested, tying it to exascale supercomputers,” he said.

The new Intel interconnect aims to cover the waterfront in applications. At the low end, it could be used in microservers to link a hundred or more processors at tens of GBytes/second with latencies of less than 1,000 nanoseconds. At the high end, it ultimately will scale up to linking hundreds of thousands of processors at hundreds of GBytes/second at latencies measured in tens of nanoseconds.

The interconnect will appear in Xeon, Xeon Phi and Atom processors geared for such servers. It’s not clear when Intel will relesase details of the new interconnect and CPUs using it, although some details may emerge from this week’s Intel Developer Forum.

“We haven’t finished the road map planning,” said Hazra.

Most of the work defining the interconnect appears to be going on inside Intel with the help of a few software companies and systems integrators. “We have strong software ecosystem,” he said.

The technology likely will emerge as a set of new capabilities layered on to the exsiting Quick Path Interconnect Intel uses as its proprietary processor bus. The technology may use elements of existing Ethernet, Infiniband and proprietary interconnects inclouding RapidIO, now being proposed as a competing standard for ARM server SoCs.

“We’ve looked at all the potential solutions and their pros and cons,” Hazra said.

Intel collaborated with SeaMicro on the startup's Atom- and Xeon-based server designs until AMD bought the startup earlier this year. “We know what their fabric was and it was interesting for a microserver class products line, but I have no idea where it has evolved,” he said.

Related stories:

New twist in Intel, ARM server war: Interconnects


Intel forum is next front in x86 vs. ARM war


Cray sells interconnect hardware unit to Intel

AMD to buy microserver startup SeaMicro

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