Nvidia Ups Hardware Game with 16-GPU DGX-2 Server and 18-Port NVSwitch

By Tiffany Trader

March 27, 2018

Nvidia unveiled a raft of new products from its annual technology conference in San Jose today, and as expected, there was no major new silicon announcement (or any mention of what’s next on the roadmap). Chip consumers can only handle so many refreshes and V100 just came out in September – but Nvidia did have a few surprises in store for HPC hardware aficionados. The de facto server maker is announcing a higher-memory V100, an upgraded DGX server and most impressively, Nvidia’s first ever switch technology.

In front of nearly 8,000 attendees at the San Jose Convention center in a two-and-a-half hour keynote, Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang announced that the company is upgrading its Tesla V100 products (SXM and PCIe modules) to now have 32 GB of memory each, a 2X boost, to help data scientists train deeper larger models and to boost the performance of memory-constrained HPC applications.

The original V100s had 16GB GPUs with a 4-hi stack of HBM2 memory; now the chip has an 8-hi stack of HBM2. All the other stats are the same (floating point numbers, CUDA cores, thermals, electricals), which will be a relief to channel partners and end users who just made investments in the V100 and related components. The larger memory GPU helps with larger networks, enabling larger batch sizes and more training in parallel. Nvidia said it’s seeing neural machine translation and large-scale FFTs, the latter commonly used in the oil and gas industry and signal processing, executing about 50 percent faster.

Huang also unveiled the 16-GPU DGX-2 server – and like the ‘2’ in the name, the box offers delivers two petaflops at half-precision (FP16), twice the computational amperage of the first-iteration eight-GPU DGX-1 unit. So how did Nvidia pack 16-NVlinked GPUs into one server if the V100s GPUs only have 6 ports? Well that brings us to the next part of the hardware reveal: the NVLink Switch, or NVSwitch.

Nvidia’s NVSwitch

The NVSwitch extends the innovations of Nvidia’s NVLink interconnect and offers 5x higher bandwidth “than the best PCIe switch,” according to Nvidia. It’s an 18-port fully connected crossbar switch (comprised of 12 switch ASICs) that allows users to build an NVLink fabric. Each port delivers 50 GB/sec for a total of 900 GB/sec of aggregate NVLink bi-directional bandwidth in a single device. “It is a fully-connected crossbar internally – at every port connected to every other port at full speed,” said Ian Buck in a pre-announcement press briefing yesterday. “We spared no expense on the design of this to make sure we would never be limited by GPU to GPU communication.”

The DGX-2 is a monster. The 10U, 350 lb mega-server houses two boards, with eight v100s 32GBs and six NVSwitches on each, enabling the GPUs to communicate at a record 2.4 TB per second. All those GPUs and switches consume a lot of power and the entire machine can burn a turbine-spinning 10,000 watts.

The server supports both InfiniBand or 100G Ethernet and increases the system memory to 1.5 TB (LRDIMM), up from 512 GB. It has two Intel Xeon Platinum (Skylake-SP) CPUs and 30 TB of NVMe SSDs, expandable up to 60 TB. Since not every user wants to take advantage of all 16 GPUs all the time and to make the product cloud-friendly, Nvidia is announcing full KVM support, so the system can either run all 16 GPUs with NVSwitch, or it can be segmented down to a single GPU.

Nvidia announced that with DGX-2 it has taken the training time of FAIRSeq, a neural machine translation model, from 10 days (on the V100-equipped DGX-1) down to 1.5 days, a 10x improvement in six months. Nvidia claims that it would take an equivalent of about 300 Skylake servers to get that same performance into a single server.

The price tag for the DGX-2 server is $399,000 and availability is scheduled for the third quarter.

The 32GB v100 GPU is available immediately across Nvidia’s entire DGX portfolio and it will also be available from major computer manufacturers, including IBM, Cray, Hewlett Packard Enterprise, Lenovo, Supermicro and Tyan. Oracle announced that it will offer Tesla V100 32GB in the Oracle Cloud infrastructure the second half of 2018.

Nvidia also announced it has updated its deep learning stack with new versions of Nvidia CUDA, TensorRT, NCCL and cuDNN. Nvidia said it has crossed the 8 million mark for total number of CUDA downloads, more than half of those in the last year.

Subscribe to HPCwire's Weekly Update!

Be the most informed person in the room! Stay ahead of the tech trends with industry updates delivered to you every week!

Quantinuum Reports 99.9% 2-Qubit Gate Fidelity, Caps Eventful 2 Months

April 16, 2024

March and April have been good months for Quantinuum, which today released a blog announcing the ion trap quantum computer specialist has achieved a 99.9% (three nines) two-qubit gate fidelity on its H1 system. The lates Read more…

Mystery Solved: Intel’s Former HPC Chief Now Running Software Engineering Group 

April 15, 2024

Last year, Jeff McVeigh, Intel's readily available leader of the high-performance computing group, suddenly went silent, with no interviews granted or appearances at press conferences.  It led to questions -- what's Read more…

Exciting Updates From Stanford HAI’s Seventh Annual AI Index Report

April 15, 2024

As the AI revolution marches on, it is vital to continually reassess how this technology is reshaping our world. To that end, researchers at Stanford’s Institute for Human-Centered AI (HAI) put out a yearly report to t Read more…

Crossing the Quantum Threshold: The Path to 10,000 Qubits

April 15, 2024

Editor’s Note: Why do qubit count and quality matter? What’s the difference between physical qubits and logical qubits? Quantum computer vendors toss these terms and numbers around as indicators of the strengths of t Read more…

Intel’s Vision Advantage: Chips Are Available Off-the-Shelf

April 11, 2024

The chip market is facing a crisis: chip development is now concentrated in the hands of the few. A confluence of events this week reminded us how few chips are available off the shelf, a concern raised at many recent Read more…

The VC View: Quantonation’s Deep Dive into Funding Quantum Start-ups

April 11, 2024

Yesterday Quantonation — which promotes itself as a one-of-a-kind venture capital (VC) company specializing in quantum science and deep physics  — announced its second fund targeting €200 million. The very idea th Read more…

Exciting Updates From Stanford HAI’s Seventh Annual AI Index Report

April 15, 2024

As the AI revolution marches on, it is vital to continually reassess how this technology is reshaping our world. To that end, researchers at Stanford’s Instit Read more…

Intel’s Vision Advantage: Chips Are Available Off-the-Shelf

April 11, 2024

The chip market is facing a crisis: chip development is now concentrated in the hands of the few. A confluence of events this week reminded us how few chips Read more…

The VC View: Quantonation’s Deep Dive into Funding Quantum Start-ups

April 11, 2024

Yesterday Quantonation — which promotes itself as a one-of-a-kind venture capital (VC) company specializing in quantum science and deep physics  — announce Read more…

Nvidia’s GTC Is the New Intel IDF

April 9, 2024

After many years, Nvidia's GPU Technology Conference (GTC) was back in person and has become the conference for those who care about semiconductors and AI. I Read more…

Google Announces Homegrown ARM-based CPUs 

April 9, 2024

Google sprang a surprise at the ongoing Google Next Cloud conference by introducing its own ARM-based CPU called Axion, which will be offered to customers in it Read more…

Computational Chemistry Needs To Be Sustainable, Too

April 8, 2024

A diverse group of computational chemists is encouraging the research community to embrace a sustainable software ecosystem. That's the message behind a recent Read more…

Hyperion Research: Eleven HPC Predictions for 2024

April 4, 2024

HPCwire is happy to announce a new series with Hyperion Research  - a fact-based market research firm focusing on the HPC market. In addition to providing mark Read more…

Google Making Major Changes in AI Operations to Pull in Cash from Gemini

April 4, 2024

Over the last week, Google has made some under-the-radar changes, including appointing a new leader for AI development, which suggests the company is taking its Read more…

Nvidia H100: Are 550,000 GPUs Enough for This Year?

August 17, 2023

The GPU Squeeze continues to place a premium on Nvidia H100 GPUs. In a recent Financial Times article, Nvidia reports that it expects to ship 550,000 of its lat Read more…

DoD Takes a Long View of Quantum Computing

December 19, 2023

Given the large sums tied to expensive weapon systems – think $100-million-plus per F-35 fighter – it’s easy to forget the U.S. Department of Defense is a Read more…

Synopsys Eats Ansys: Does HPC Get Indigestion?

February 8, 2024

Recently, it was announced that Synopsys is buying HPC tool developer Ansys. Started in Pittsburgh, Pa., in 1970 as Swanson Analysis Systems, Inc. (SASI) by John Swanson (and eventually renamed), Ansys serves the CAE (Computer Aided Engineering)/multiphysics engineering simulation market. Read more…

Intel’s Server and PC Chip Development Will Blur After 2025

January 15, 2024

Intel's dealing with much more than chip rivals breathing down its neck; it is simultaneously integrating a bevy of new technologies such as chiplets, artificia Read more…

Choosing the Right GPU for LLM Inference and Training

December 11, 2023

Accelerating the training and inference processes of deep learning models is crucial for unleashing their true potential and NVIDIA GPUs have emerged as a game- Read more…

Baidu Exits Quantum, Closely Following Alibaba’s Earlier Move

January 5, 2024

Reuters reported this week that Baidu, China’s giant e-commerce and services provider, is exiting the quantum computing development arena. Reuters reported � Read more…

Comparing NVIDIA A100 and NVIDIA L40S: Which GPU is Ideal for AI and Graphics-Intensive Workloads?

October 30, 2023

With long lead times for the NVIDIA H100 and A100 GPUs, many organizations are looking at the new NVIDIA L40S GPU, which it’s a new GPU optimized for AI and g Read more…

Shutterstock 1179408610

Google Addresses the Mysteries of Its Hypercomputer 

December 28, 2023

When Google launched its Hypercomputer earlier this month (December 2023), the first reaction was, "Say what?" It turns out that the Hypercomputer is Google's t Read more…

Leading Solution Providers

Contributors

AMD MI3000A

How AMD May Get Across the CUDA Moat

October 5, 2023

When discussing GenAI, the term "GPU" almost always enters the conversation and the topic often moves toward performance and access. Interestingly, the word "GPU" is assumed to mean "Nvidia" products. (As an aside, the popular Nvidia hardware used in GenAI are not technically... Read more…

Shutterstock 1606064203

Meta’s Zuckerberg Puts Its AI Future in the Hands of 600,000 GPUs

January 25, 2024

In under two minutes, Meta's CEO, Mark Zuckerberg, laid out the company's AI plans, which included a plan to build an artificial intelligence system with the eq Read more…

China Is All In on a RISC-V Future

January 8, 2024

The state of RISC-V in China was discussed in a recent report released by the Jamestown Foundation, a Washington, D.C.-based think tank. The report, entitled "E Read more…

Shutterstock 1285747942

AMD’s Horsepower-packed MI300X GPU Beats Nvidia’s Upcoming H200

December 7, 2023

AMD and Nvidia are locked in an AI performance battle – much like the gaming GPU performance clash the companies have waged for decades. AMD has claimed it Read more…

Nvidia’s New Blackwell GPU Can Train AI Models with Trillions of Parameters

March 18, 2024

Nvidia's latest and fastest GPU, codenamed Blackwell, is here and will underpin the company's AI plans this year. The chip offers performance improvements from Read more…

Eyes on the Quantum Prize – D-Wave Says its Time is Now

January 30, 2024

Early quantum computing pioneer D-Wave again asserted – that at least for D-Wave – the commercial quantum era has begun. Speaking at its first in-person Ana Read more…

GenAI Having Major Impact on Data Culture, Survey Says

February 21, 2024

While 2023 was the year of GenAI, the adoption rates for GenAI did not match expectations. Most organizations are continuing to invest in GenAI but are yet to Read more…

Intel’s Xeon General Manager Talks about Server Chips 

January 2, 2024

Intel is talking data-center growth and is done digging graves for its dead enterprise products, including GPUs, storage, and networking products, which fell to Read more…

  • arrow
  • Click Here for More Headlines
  • arrow
HPCwire