12:09PM EDT - Our first talk of the day is from Intel, about its next-generation Ice Lake Xeon Scalable processor.

12:10PM EDT - We're 20 minutes from the Intel talk starting, but Hot Chips will commence with a 15-minute intro talk to the conference, which we'll cover here

12:10PM EDT - This is the first 'Virtual' Hot Chips, due to COVID. Last year's attendance was 1200-1400 or so (I'm still waiting on exact numbers)

12:10PM EDT - With the conference going virtual, they cut prices, which means there has been an uptick in signups I'm told

12:11PM EDT - Highest cost for the conference and tutorials was $160. Bargain

12:11PM EDT - Tutorials were yesterday, whereas the main conference starts today

12:12PM EDT - Today there's a lot of talks on CPU and GPU. Intel, IBM, AMD, more Intel, then NVIDIA A100, Intel Xe, and Xbox Series X to finish around 6pm PT

12:18PM EDT - And here we go with the intro to the conference

12:19PM EDT - Record registration numbers. 2100+ as of this morning, still growing

12:20PM EDT - Intel is the Rhodium sponsor

12:20PM EDT - That paid for some of the equipment for streaming, and provided the studio for the event

12:20PM EDT - Platinum sponsor is AMD

12:21PM EDT - Now going through some of the attendee info - links to help with logins and such

12:23PM EDT - Presentations and recordings are usually made public by end-of-year

12:29PM EDT - Two keynotes, one from Raja

12:32PM EDT - Questions through slack through the event

12:32PM EDT - And now the first session begins

12:33PM EDT - First up is Intel Ice Lake Xeon

12:34PM EDT - Speaker was lead on Nehalem-EX, and featured in Sandy, Ice

12:34PM EDT - 10+ process

12:34PM EDT - New 2-socket whitley

12:34PM EDT - Uses Sunny Cove

12:35PM EDT - New ISA

12:35PM EDT - 384 OoO window, 128+72 in flight loads/stores

12:35PM EDT - vs cascade

12:35PM EDT - 48 kB L1D

12:36PM EDT - 1.25 MB L2 cache

12:36PM EDT - ~18% IPC over Cascade

12:36PM EDT - second FMA

12:37PM EDT - New instructions

12:37PM EDT - AVX-512 IFMA, VPMADD52

12:37PM EDT - Vector AES, GFNI, SHA-NI

12:37PM EDT - VBMI, VPOPCNT*

12:38PM EDT - (not much more detail than what's on the slides)

12:38PM EDT - Updating current software to boost perfomance

12:40PM EDT - New infrastructure architecture

12:40PM EDT - New control structure

12:40PM EDT - Distributed control and telemetry fabric

12:41PM EDT - One new fabric dedicated for power, one for other

12:41PM EDT - P-Unit for power

12:41PM EDT - Communication streamlined

12:42PM EDT - Control is IP independent

12:42PM EDT - Building new SoCs becomes easier

12:43PM EDT - Migration from Cascade to Ice

12:43PM EDT - 28 core to 28 core

12:43PM EDT - Move from 6x3 ring to 7x3 ring

12:43PM EDT - Memory is now 2 channels per segment, not 3

12:43PM EDT - So 8 memory channels total

12:44PM EDT - IOs on north and south of die

12:44PM EDT - PCIe Gen 4 (x64?)

12:45PM EDT - New IO virtualization implementation, up to 3x bw scaling

12:45PM EDT - larger TLBs and large page sizes

12:45PM EDT - 3 UPI links, independently clocked

12:45PM EDT - Doesn't say if 10.2 GT/s

12:46PM EDT - Each UPI agent has its own fabric stop for better comms to other sockets

12:46PM EDT - New memory controller design with optimizations - built from ground up, built with efficiency in mind

12:47PM EDT - Best efficiency across all frequencies. Supports top DDR4 speeds (3200 at 2DPC?)

12:47PM EDT - TME using AES-XTS 128-bit, enabled by BIOS

12:47PM EDT - When enabled, entire memory is encrypted. Key is not accessible from BIOS or software. HW generated key

12:47PM EDT - Overhead is a few percent perf impact

12:48PM EDT - Support for Optane-200 DCPMM

12:48PM EDT - At top DDR4 speed? DDR4-3200? I thought 200 was 2666 only

12:48PM EDT - New mechnaisms for latency and coherence

12:49PM EDT - Dynamic prefetch throttling - modulates prefetching under memory bandwidth to enable faster speeds rather than overloading the prefetchers

12:50PM EDT - Non-Temporal Write optimization helps low core count writes by not waiting for snoop responses - pull data from core early

12:52PM EDT - OSB - opportunitistic snoop broadcast updated, support for new opcodes to reduce latency for socket cache-to-cache by ~70ns

12:54PM EDT - Bandwidth increases compared to Cascade

12:54PM EDT - Now power management latency

12:55PM EDT - P-state and C-state transition latency were hurting performance

12:55PM EDT - New PLL design allows for not locking

12:55PM EDT - Allows transitions almost not-visible

12:56PM EDT - Latency spikes disappear when P-states change

12:56PM EDT - Also new Fabric frequency change - used to drain buffers and restart clocks. Now no longer needed, reduces latency by 3x

12:56PM EDT - Latencies on bottom right of slide

12:57PM EDT - AVX512 frequency is low compared to SSE - now some improvements

12:57PM EDT - Better power analysis of specific AVX512 instructions

12:57PM EDT - AVX512 now has smarter mapping between instructions and maps

12:57PM EDT - 3 new power levels for AVX512

12:58PM EDT - For specific instructions, end up with better frequency for 256-bit and 512-bit instructions

12:58PM EDT - Provides software writers more incentive to use AVX-512

12:59PM EDT - Speed Select Features

12:59PM EDT - SST-PP: Performance Profile

12:59PM EDT - SST-BF: Base Frequency

12:59PM EDT - SST-CP: Core Power

01:00PM EDT - SST-TF: Turbo Frequency

01:00PM EDT - Select Ice Lake SKUs will have Intel SST enabled, allowing customers to change the performance profile of the CPU based on cooling or requirements

01:00PM EDT - Dynamically adjusted at runtime

01:02PM EDT - Wrap up - Sunny Cove in Xeon on 10nm. Better infrastructure and fabric control

01:03PM EDT - Ice Lake: A Balanced CPU for All Server Usages

01:04PM EDT - Now Q&A

01:04PM EDT - Q: What is the perf impact when TME enabled? A: Target was to be less than 5%. We are seeing 1-2% on pre-prod samples. Not more than that.

01:05PM EDT - Q: How will base frequency scale for AVX-512. Only turbo in presentation A: Similar improvements will apply. Less loss of freq for similar instructions

01:06PM EDT - Q: Support additional crypto? A: Reach out to Intel if you want additional algorithms

01:06PM EDT - Q: What change in PCIe for VM improvement? A: New Virtualization engine design. Increased TLB. VT-D IOMMU running at double speed. Large page support for translation requests as well. All new, that's how 2x

01:07PM EDT - Q: 18% IPC at iso-core. How does it compare with Cascade/Cooper A: They were the same arch, cascade/cooper. No comment on SoC level performance. We will see substantial improvements at SoC level.

01:08PM EDT - That's a wrap. Next talk is IBM, head on over to that live blog

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  • Spunjji - Tuesday, August 18, 2020 - link

    It's pretty similar to how AMD do Desktop/Server first, then Mobile with tweaks - only in reverse!
  • anonomouse - Monday, August 17, 2020 - link

    Considering that Willow Cove is basically more or less the same as Sunny Cove, I kinda doubt Sapphire Rapids would bother to "upgrade" to Willow Cove. It'd be more likely that it's a bit later, but with Golden Cove.
  • Rudde - Saturday, August 22, 2020 - link

    Willow Cove is basically Sunny Cove adapted to higher frequencies (SuperFin / 10nm+). Considering Ice Lake SP is already on 10nm+, I don't see any reason to use Willow Cove.
  • JayNor - Saturday, September 12, 2020 - link

    I don't recall seeing in any presentation a mention that Ice Lake Server has been updated to SuperFin. I think they would have been explicit, if this were so.
  • AntonErtl - Monday, August 17, 2020 - link

    Willow Cove has 1.25MB L2 (and a non-inclusive L3), like this server Sunny Cove (and the server Skylake). This server Sunny Cove also has an extra FMA unit. So microarchitecturally Willow Cove is between client and server Sunny Cove, as far as I gather from the reporting. I guess there are improvements in Willow Cove at lower levels that were ot ready in time for server Sunny Cove (server parts have longer lead times); or maybe the server team is not as keen as others to have a separate name for the core.

    One interesting development is that the OoO Window size is given as 384, while I had that number as 352 earlier (but don't remember from where).
  • Ian Cutress - Monday, August 17, 2020 - link

    Development cycle. The Xeon chip takes longer to optimize and bring to market than a mobile chip. That and the process delays ofc
  • anonomouse - Monday, August 17, 2020 - link

    They said it's more or less the same core microarchitecturally, so there's not really a big difference. At that point, it's probably more to do with just with what fabrication technology they are able to use in "volume".
  • DigitalFreak - Monday, August 17, 2020 - link

    Intel has some literal "hot chips" to talk about this year.
  • Eulytaur - Monday, August 17, 2020 - link

    Disappointed that Intel didn't release any SKU's yet, I hope we get some soon because this talk about improvements with no actual SKU's is very worrying.
  • Ian Cutress - Monday, August 17, 2020 - link

    Full launch later this year. General Availability, who knows.

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