Today we’re covering some news of the more unusual type, and that is a roadmap update from Ampere, and having a closer look what the company is planning in terms of architectural and microarchitectural choices of their upcoming next-generation server CPUs in 2022 and onwards.

For people not familiar with Ampere, the company was founded back in 2017 by former Intel president Renée James, notably built upon a group of former Intel engineers who had left along with her to the new adventure. Initially, the company had relied on IP and design talent from former AppliedMicro’s X-Gene CPUs and still supporting legacy products such as the eMAG line-up.

With Arm having starting a more emphasised focus on designing and releasing datacentre and enterprise CPU IP line-ups in the form of the new Neoverse core offerings a few years back, over the last year or so we had finally seen the fruits of these efforts in the form of the release of several implementations of the first generation Neoverse N1 server CPU cores products, such as Amazon’s Graviton2, and more importantly, Ampere’s “Altra Quicksilver” 80-core server CPU.

The Altra Q line-up, for which we reviewed the flagship Q80-33 SKU last winter, was inarguably one of the most impressive Arm server CPU executions in past years, with the chip being able to keep up or beat the best AMD and Intel had to offer, even extending that positioning against the latest generation Xeon and EPYC generation.

Ampere’s next generation "Mystique" Altra Max is the next product on the roadmap, and is targeted to be sampling in the next few months and released later this year. The design relies on the same first generation Arm Neoverse N1 cores, at the same maximum 250W TDP as a drop-in replacement on the same platform, however with an optimised implementation that now allows for up to 128 CPU cores – 60% more cores than the first iteration of Altra we have today, and double the amount of cores of competitor systems from AMD or Amazon’s Graviton2.

For the future for designs beyond the Altra Max, Ampere is promising that they will be continuing emphasis of what they consider “predictable performance” for workloads with scaling socket load, increasing core counts with a linear increase in performance, and what I found interesting as a metric, to continue to reduce power per core – something to keep in mind as we’re discussing the next big news today:

Replacing Neoverse with Full Custom Cores

Today’s big reveal comes in regard to the microarchitecture choices that Ampere is going to be using starting in their next generation 2022 “Siryn” design, successor to the Altra Max, and relates to the CPU IP being used:

Starting with Siryn, Ampere will be switching over from Arm’s Neoverse cores to their new in-house full custom CPU microarchitecture. This announcement admittedly caught us completely off-guard, as we had largely expected Ampere to continue to be using Arm’s Neoverse cores for the foreseeable future. The switch to a new full custom microarchitecture puts Ampere on a completely different trajectory than we had initially expected from the company.

In fact, Ampere explains that what the move towards a full custom microarchitecture core design was actually always the plan for the company since its inception, and their custom CPU design had been in the works for the past 3+ years.

In terms of background - the design team leading the effort is lead by Ampere’s CTO Atiq Bajwa, who is also acting as the chief architect on the project. Bajwa and the team surrounding him appear to be mostly comprised of high-profile ex-Intel engineers and veterans which had left the company along with Renée James in 2017, topped-off with talent from a slew of other companies in the industry who joined them in the effort. The pedigree and history of the team is marked by achievements such as working on Intel’s Haswell and Broadwell processors.

Ampere’s explanation and rationale for designing a full custom core from the ground up, is that they are claiming they are able to achieve better performance and better power efficiency in datacentre workloads compared to what Arm’s Neoverse “more general purpose” designs are able to achieve. This is quite an interesting claim to make, and contrasts Arm’s projections and goals for their Neoverse cores. The recent Neoverse V1 and N2 cores were unveiled in more detail last month and are claimed to achieve significant generational IPC gains.

For Ampere to relinquish the reliance on Arm’s next-gen cores, and instead to rely on their own design and actually go forward with that switch in the next-gen product, shows a sign of great confidence in their custom microarchitecture design – and at the same time one could interpret it as a sign of no confidence in Arm’s Neoverse IP and roadmap. This comes at a great juxtaposition to what others are doing in the industry: Marvell has stopped development of their own ThunderX CPU IP in favour of adopting Arm Neoverse cores. On the other hand, not specifically related to the cloud and server market, Qualcomm earlier this year have acquired Nuvia, and their rationale and explanation was similar to Ampere’s in that they’re claiming that the new in-house design capabilities offered performance that otherwise wouldn’t have been possible with Arm’s Cortex CPU IP.

In our talks with Jeff Wittich, Ampere’s Chief Product Officer, he explains that today’s announcement should hopefully help paint a better picture of where Ampere is heading as a company – whether they’d continue to be content on “just” being an Arm IP integrator, or if they had plans for more. Jeff was pretty clear that in a few years’ time they’re envisioning and aiming for Ampere to be a top CPU provider for the cloud market and major player in the industry.

In terms of technical details as to how Ampere’s CPU microarchitecture will be different in terms of approach and how and why they see it as a superior performer in the cloud, are questions to which we’ll have to be a bit more patient for hearing answers to. The company wouldn’t comment on the exact status of the Siryn design right now – on whether it’s been taped in or taped out yet, but they do retierate that they’re planning customer sampling in early 2022 in accordance to prior roadmap disclosures. By the tone of the discussions, it seems the design is mostly complete, and Ampere is doing the finishing touches on the whole SoC. Jeff mentioned that in due time, they also will be doing microarchitectural disclosures on the new core, explaining their design choices in things like front-end or back-end design, and why they see it as a better fit for the cloud market.

Altra Max later this year, more cloud customer disclosures

Beyond the longer-term >2022 plans, today’s roadmap updates also contained a few more performance claim reiterations of Ampere’s upcoming 128-core Altra Max product, which is planned to hit the market later in the second half of the year and customers being sampled in the next few months.

The “Mystique” code-named Altra Max design will be characterised in that it’s able to increase the core-count by 60% versus the current generation Altra design, all while remaining at and below the same 250W TDP. The performance slides here are showcasing comparisons and performance claims against what is by now the previous generation competitor products, Ampere here simply explains they haven’t been able to get their hands on more recent Milan or Ice Lake-SP hardware to test. Nevertheless, the relative positioning against the Altra Q80-30 and the EPYC 7742 would indicate that the new chip would easily surpass the performance of even AMD’s latest EPYC 7763.

In the slide, Ampere actually discloses the SKU model name being used for the comparison, which is the "Altra Max M128-30" – meaning for the first time we have confirmation that all 128 cores are running at up to 3GHz clock speed, which is impressive given that we’re supposed to be seeing the same TDP and power characteristics between it and the Q80-33. We’ll be verifying these figures in the next few months once we get to review the Altra Max.

Today’s announcement also comes with an update on Ampere’s customers. Oracle was notably one of the first Altra adopters, but today’s disclosure also includes a wider range of cloud providers, with big names such as ByteDance and Tencent Cloud, two of the biggest hyperscalers in China.

Microsoft in particular is a big addition to the customer list, and while Ampere’s Jeff Wittich couldn’t comment on whether Microsoft has other internal plans in the works, he said that today’s announcement should give more clarity around the rumours of the Redmond company working on Arm-based servers, reports of which had surfaced back in December. Microsoft’s Azure cloud service is only second to Amazon’s AWS in terms of size and scale, and the company onboarding Altra products is a massive win for Ampere.

Taking control of one’s own future

Today’s announcements by Ampere of them deploying their own microarchitecture in future products is a major change in the company’s prospects. The news admittedly took us by surprise, but in the grand scheme of things it makes a lot of sense given that the company aims to be a major industry player in the next few years – taking full control of one’s own product future is critical in terms of assuring that success.

While over the years we’ve seen many CPU design teams be disbanded, actually having a new player and microarchitecture pop up is a much welcome change to the industry. While the news is a blow to Arm’s Neoverse IP, the fact that Ampere continues to use the Arm architecture is a further encouragement and win for the Arm ecosystem.

Related Reading:

Comments Locked

160 Comments

View All Comments

  • SarahKerrigan - Wednesday, May 19, 2021 - link

    Well, okay. I'm utterly mystified by this.

    I used X-Gene and eMAG (never XG2 - never even saw one in the wild - but iirc it was a conservative modification of XG.) They were not stellar cores. Altra was a huge breath of fresh air, Neoverse has become legitimately very good and has a strong long-term roadmap... and they want to go back to custom microarchitectures?
  • deltaFx2 - Wednesday, May 19, 2021 - link

    Because there’s nothing they do that ms, fb, google and others can’t do in house. And they probably are already doing so. They see the writing on the wall. Their best chance was to get acquired by a hyper scaler but seems like they could not. Trouble with custom cores is that they are up against competition doing cores for decades. I see trouble ahead
  • Silma - Wednesday, May 19, 2021 - link

    I would have thought Ampere would go the risc-v way, specializing in a few strategic IPs to keep a performance or performance per watt advantage on competition.
  • mode_13h - Friday, May 21, 2021 - link

    Going RISC-V right now would be getting out ahead of the market. Hyperscalers seem to be focused on x86 and ARM.
  • FunBunny2 - Wednesday, May 19, 2021 - link

    "Trouble with custom cores is that they are up against competition doing cores for decades. I see trouble ahead "

    the trouble with 'developing' any kind of thingee that's rooted in maths, and cpu (and all the bells and whistles moved on-chip) are surely maths, is that over time, and not always much of it, there is discovered One Best Solution. the mainframe hasn't changed in decades. OTOH, the 8086, in all its variations, was not the One Best Solution, but managed through pure luck and some questionable behaviour, to become The One Solution in microprocessors. in due time, if not already, there will be One Best Solution at the micro-arch level, too. moving evermore off-chip function on-chip isn't exactly any form of innovation, just incremental lock-in to the chip.
  • alfalfacat - Wednesday, May 19, 2021 - link

    To be blunt, you have no idea what you are talking about. Modern chips are all about well-known tradeoffs along various dimensions, and there is definitely not One Best Solution. Your comment about mainframes not changing in decades is also just factually wrong - new Z mainframes are immensely different from last century's mainframes, they just have really good backwards compatibility.
  • FunBunny2 - Wednesday, May 19, 2021 - link

    "new Z mainframes are immensely different from last century's mainframes"

    it's still the same CISC architecture it always was. registers are wider and such hardware advances (pretty much just a microprocessor implementation), but just as 8086 remains the core, so to speak of Intel/AMD, so is the 360 for z. it's backward compatible just because it's the same. if it weren't the One Best Solution, then there'd be a host of other mainframe, aka COBOL, machines. Sun, among others, tried to take the mini/server construct to overthrow the IBM mainframe. none pulled it off.
  • dotjaz - Thursday, May 20, 2021 - link

    >it's backward compatible just because it's the same

    How stupid are you? Modern x86-64 with all the extensions is nothing like 8086.
  • FunBunny2 - Thursday, May 20, 2021 - link

    of course it is: it executes the 8086 ISA. it also executes some additional instructions. same for the 360 to z. does the current 86 cpu have a unique ALU not available in 1978? does it not execute original 16 bit instructions? of course it does. 99.44% of the 'innovation' since the 360/30 or 8086 has been in widening registers, piling on on-chip caches, and pulling off-chip functions on-chip. the killing off of the Seven Dwarfs and, later, the non-86 ISA microprocessors (Power survives; ARM is still up in the air) has led to a computer monoculture. well, duoculture.

    backward compatibility is almost entirely about OS stability, since that's what applications know about. keep the system calls stable, and your machine is backward compatible. that's the reason you can run 360/DOS code on today's z; not that you would want to. OTOH, up to a few years ago, dedicated 360 code was still running; it ain't broke so don't fix it.

    OTOH, as is well known, any machine with a C complier can run *nix, IOW at least one OS (well, a few of them) don't much care about the ISA.
  • arashi - Friday, May 21, 2021 - link

    I was confused to see your name one day when I was flipping through the dictionary, until I realized your name turned up as an example for Dunning-Kruger.

Log in

Don't have an account? Sign up now