Tilera's 100-core processors take on Sandy Bridge

NEWS

Tilera has introduced a range of processors with up to 100 cores, aiming to take on Intel in servers that handle high-throughput web applications.

Tilera Gx

Tilera has introduced the 40nm 64-bit Tilera Gx family of processors. Photo credit: Tilera

The chips in the 40nm 64-bit Tilera Gx family, announced on Tuesday, have between 36 and 100 cores and are intended by the Silicon Valley-based chip design company to compete with Intel's Sandy Bridge range of processors.

"The reason we can go against Sandy Bridge architecture is [Intel's range] was designed for general-purpose [applications], so it has to account for single-thread performance and power-point performance and Windows," Ihab Bishara, Tilera's head of marketing, told ZDNet UK.

"What we're targeting here is a very specific [high-throughput] application... If we compare our chip to Sandy Bridge in the standard enterprise application, we will not do well," he added.

The three chips in the GX family are the 36-core Gx3036, the 64-core GX3064 and the 100-core Gx3100. They are designed for low-latency, high-throughput web applications, such as data-mining frameworks like Hadoop, NoSQL and in-memory databases.

According to Tilera, the Gx family has 10 times the performance-per-watt of Intel's Sandy Bridge architecture for certain applications. Each of the cores of a Gx family chip consumes less than 0.5W, while on the chip level, the 36-core processor takes 20W, the 64 uses 35W and the 100 48W.

That compares with Intel's latest generation of Sandy Bridge processors, which range between 35W and 95W, according to the company's own published figures. Its mainstream server design, Xeon, ranges between 20W and 130W, with the bulk of the family sitting at around 80W or 90W.

Intel swipe

Tilera criticised Intel's attempts at many-core processors, such as its in-development many-integrated core architecture, which is expected to debut in Knights Ferry in 2012.

"An x86 is an x86, whether it's Atom cores, Pentium cores — the overhead that you're carrying is the same. You need to carry the overhead to be binary compatible," Bishara said. "What [Intel] do, even with Atom, is lower the frequency to get lower power and to get more cores in the same chip."

An x86 is an x86, whether it's Atom cores, Pentium cores — the overhead that you're carrying is the same.

– Ihab Bishara, Tilera

In other words, Tilera believes that because Intel keeps all its chips — apart from Itanium — on the same architecture, it cannot create an architecture that is perfectly suited to the specific-application many-core market.

The Gx3036 will be sampling in July, and the Gx3064 and Gx3100 should be available in early 2012, according to Tilera. After the Gx, it hopes to bring out its 28nm Stratton chip family in 2013, which will scale up to 200 cores.

The development of Tilera Gx has drawn on in-depth discussions with the world's "largest cloud-computing companies", Tilera said. Some of the largest cloud-computing companies include Amazon, Google, Microsoft and eBay.

Non-x86, but developer tools available

Tilera's Gx chips support the 2.6.36 release of Linux and are CentOS compatible. They support standard coding languages such as C and C++, Java, PHP, Perl and Python, which are implemented via a GCC compiler that has been ported to Tilera's architecture.

At the moment, Tilera has given instruction set details of the Gx cores to customers, to allow for low-level programming. It is planning to make the details public but declined to give a date.

Tilera's chips pass information between cores via a mesh network, which distributes the cache throughout the processor and allows for multiple connections between individual cores. Users can access the on-chip network, Tilera said, and can use it to communicate between cores.

"In most cases, customers access these networks to accelerate certain functions in their application and improve overall performance," Bishara said.


Get the latest technology news and analysis, blogs and reviews delivered directly to your inbox with ZDNet UK's newsletters.

Talkback

This post has been removed by a moderator.

This post has been removed by a moderator.

It's look like that we are having some FPGA in the CPU.. it's seems that we are going to develop with System C or Handel C for home applications in the next 10 years.. ... we are going to end up with All parts as FPGAs and connect them with FPGA Bus too in.

Rajab Natshah via Facebook 22 June, 2011 22:13
Reply

@Rajab: we have worked with Tilera. Your depiction of it as FGPA based processor is not accurate. This is standard RISC CPU, with Linux and detailed development SDK based on gcc, C libraries. As in any other x86 or Mips processor these days. You can choose to write your algo to run on a single core, or use the mapper to make it run on multiple cores. Watch out for concurrency and multicore issues, and you get tremendous performance boost.
Or you can run a multithreaded posix app on Linux, but run SMP linux on multiple Tiles. Linux scheduler will auto-schedule the threads to maximize performance.
Jigna
Paxym Inc.
www.paxym.com

jagan00 23 July, 2011 04:01
Reply

jagan00 ... the FPGA concept .. can be implemented by many companies .. Look for FPGA at this link
http://www.zdnet.co.uk/news/emerging-tech/2011/06/17/tilera-set-to-chase-intel-into-the-cloud-40093117/

We know that it's going to run Linux , Windows or Mac .. This work just to have the 100 or 200 prcessing Unite in the Same CPU.. for PCs .. or we can have them in Mobiles in the next days.

We know that we have them now.. as if you burn Intl CPU to work as 2 CPUs

Rajab Natshah via Facebook 23 July, 2011 19:18
Reply

This post has been removed by a moderator.

Post your comment

In order to post a comment you need to be registered and logged in.

You can also log in with Facebook. Log in or create your ZDNet UK account below

  • Login

Will not be displayed with your comment

By signing up for this service, you indicate that you agree to our Terms and Conditions and have read and understood our Privacy Policy. Questions about membership? Find the answers in the Community FAQ

Get ZDNet UK's daily newsletter

Enter your email address to sign up

ZDNet UK Live

itsajob

2. Bad idea. Making up patch cables loses you your commission from the cable supplier. 3. If you tidy up, other people can understand where the...

4 hours ago by itsajob on Ten IT jobs to save up for those rare lulls
Roberto_Store

Now On Sale, Unlocked iPhone 4S / Galaxy Note In Factory Box. Roberto-Techie(UK) ”Now on Sales” Smartphone, Android,Tablets,Gadget &...

8 hours ago by Roberto_Store on Samsung Galaxy S III lined up for sale
Paul Smyth

Is this classic FUD? One thing I would definitely have notice is a Mozilla threat to stop supporting GNU/Linux.

10 hours ago by Paul Smyth via Facebook on Firefox rapid release improves Fedora Linux
UnderINK

I agree with the previous commenter wholeheartedly. I couldn't say it better myself. This is very 'Big Brother'. And while I agree with protecting...

14 hours ago by UnderINK on European e-identity plan to be unveiled this month
Simon Bisson and Mary Branscombe

Nice to see that Turing's idea of a general purpose computer doing once-hardware-powered tasks in software is now universal ;-) Mary

19 hours ago by Simon Bisson and Mary Branscombe on Software with everything
Jason Burchell

seriously now. I've only bothered to read a small bit of the comments. do me and the rest of the world a favour. stop saying it does not work or...

23 hours ago by Jason Burchell via Facebook on Music industry negotiating over 24-bit downloads
Philip Charles Cohen

Read about it and weep, John Donahoe ... In addition to Visa’s V.me, there is now MasterCard’s PayPass digital wallet soon to arrive; another...

1 day ago by Philip Charles Cohen via Facebook on PayPal takes phone-based payments to the high street
apexwm

Leslie Satenstein : Where have you ever seen Mozilla even mention this? Firefox is the most popular browser in the GNU/Linux OS, so I don't see...

1 day ago by apexwm on Firefox rapid release improves Fedora Linux
songmaster

SHleG: Do you remember building a clockwork scorpion kit (I'm pretty sure I have a photo of it somewhere) — I think it was called something like...

1 day ago by songmaster on Software with everything
Chris Wortman

Good I love Yahoo! Their search engine is getting better than Google as of late. I find more of what I want on the first page, and usually within...

1 day ago by Chris Wortman via Facebook on Linux Mint 13 ramps up for KDE release
PatrickG

openhgs has made the point for Windows 8 multiple monitors without realising it! With Windows 7 you have to switch the mouse and so your focus...

1 day ago by PatrickG on Windows 8 could speed multi-monitor uptake
Leslie Satenstein

Mozilla has threatened to stop supporting Linux. I guess that UBUNTU is going with another browser. I indicated that if Mozilla stops supporting...

1 day ago by Leslie Satenstein via Facebook on Firefox rapid release improves Fedora Linux
Andy Bolstridge

Much as I abhor Microsoft's licensing practices, this is almost certainly down to purchasing IT equipment via 3rd party consultants - you get the...

1 day ago by Andy Bolstridge via Facebook on 6 million wasted licences and £1,200 PCs: welcome to government IT
Jack Schofield

@openhgs Windows users have had multiple desktops since Linus started writing Linux. They just haven't shipped as standard because not enough...

2 days ago by Jack Schofield on Windows 8 could speed multi-monitor uptake
Jack Schofield

@Phil at Cloud4 What, Microsoft gets £1,200 per PC and £1,622 per server? Gosh, I'm amazed....

2 days ago by Jack Schofield on 6 million wasted licences and £1,200 PCs: welcome to government IT
craigsc

You guys have no idea what is going on at Autonomy. Autonomy could have been a much more profitable organization. The sales operations at Autonomy...

2 days ago by craigsc on HP cuts 27,000 staff as Autonomy chief Lynch leaves
Moley

How does this impact on dual or multi booting? Seems to me to more or less prohibit this, from Windows 8 anyway. Will Grub 2 recognise Windows 8,...

2 days ago by Moley on Windows 8 start-up speed forces USB boot workaround
apexwm

I don't understand why there cannot be a slight pause during the boot process so the user can press a key. Many operating systems do this, even if...

2 days ago by apexwm on Windows 8 start-up speed forces USB boot workaround
Gavin Goodman

You can now buy the Xi3 modular computer in the UK at http://www.ocdistribution.com . This can be bought with the Tand3m software, pricing and...

2 days ago by Gavin Goodman on CES 2012: Xi3 microSERV3R
Phil at Cloud4

I agree: Mike Lynch can clearly build a business and manage strategy. I suspect the exit of Mike is more likely the end of a planned handover...

2 days ago by Phil at Cloud4 on HP cuts 27,000 staff as Autonomy chief Lynch leaves