Enabling the ARM ecosystem for HPC

November 21, 2016

2016 has been a busy time for ARM in HPC, with new hardware products becoming generally available, exciting roadmap announcements from our partners and great progress on the availability of both open-source and commercial HPC software offerings.

Introducing the Scalable Vector Extensions

ARM announced its first HPC-specific hardware architectural extension at Hot Chips 28 in August.  The Scalable Vector Extensions (SVE) for HPC are the latest addition to the ARM®v8-A architecture, and provides ARM and its licensees with the flexibility to implement vector units with a broad choice of widths (128 to 2048 bits at 128-bit increments).  Applications can be compiled once for the ARMv8-A SVE architecture, and executed correctly without modification on any SVE-capable implementation, irrespective of that implementation’s chosen SVE vector width. Further endorsing this technology, Fujitsu announced that the processor for the Post-K Japanese exascale supercomputer will be an SVE-capable ARMv8-A design.  We are pleased to be working with Fujitsu on a variety of software ecosystem development activities to ensure high-quality SVE support across the Linux operating system stack.

While availability of SVE-enabled server SoC designs are still a few years down the road, several server-class processor implementations based on ARM architecture exist today for the HPC market and more are on the way in 2017.  ARM continues to drive its HPC software ecosystem forward in support of current customer deployments and prevalent applications. ARM’s HPC ecosystem work occurs in two distinct camps:  ARM internally develops and supports a variety of commercial compilers and tools and ARM collaborates with a variety of ecosystem partners on open-source software activities and deliverables.

Extending ARM’s HPC Software Products

In 2015, ARM Performance Libraries was introduced in response to customer demand for commercially-supported math libraries for ARM’s 64-bit hardware platforms, providing the routines key to HPC: BLAS, LAPACK and FFT.  In 2016, ARM has put significant focus on performance enhancement, both through algorithmic modifications and micro-architectural tuning for specific ARMv8-A cores. This work includes parallelism support for the BLAS level 1 routines, and the introduction of hand-tuned kernels for BLAS level 3 routines (DGEMM performance is at over 90% of theoretical peak on an ARM Cortex-A57 processor). Some LAPACK parallelism has been improved by redesigning the algorithms to use OpenMP task parallelism, with routines now scaling smoothly up to 96 cores.  The latest release also adds support for FFTW-compatible basic and advanced DFT interfaces.

Recently at SC16, ARM announced the extension of its HPC commercial product offerings with two new compiler suites: ARM Compiler for HPC and ARM SVE Compiler for HPC.  The former combines the ARM Performance Libraries with ARM’s commercially-supported ARM-native compilation environment, and the latter adds support for SVE, including compiler auto-vectorization passes, SVE-tuned kernels in the ARM Performance Libraries, and the ARM Instruction Emulator, which allows SVE binary application code to execute on non-SVE ARM systems.

All of ARM’s HPC product offerings are designed for ease of deployment and use, with support for all major Linux distributions, a simple install process and integration with the popular environment modules system for HPC package management.  They are the fastest way to get productive on an ARM HPC system, allowing systems administrators, developers and users to focus on higher-value tasks such as the optimization and evaluation of their applications on ARM.

Commitment to open-source

The extensive list of available open-source packages for HPC leads ARM to take a partnership approach in order to deliver on customer requirements. At ISC16, ARM announced its founding membership in the OpenHPC project in order to help define and implement a baseline set of open-source HPC codes for end-users. At SC16, ARM went public with the availability of the first release of OpenHPC for ARMv8-A as part of OpenHPC v1.2 release.

In addition, ARM recently announced significant new support for SVE in the open-source GCC and LLVM compilers, with GCC binutils support already available upstream.  Full compiler support is expected to be published soon in consultation with the associated open-source compiler communities.

Open-source collaboration also occurs within the newly formed Linaro HPC SIG, and with PGI on the Flang project to deliver an LLVM-based Fortran Compiler.

Looking to the future

In 2017, ARM will continue to work closely with its ecosystem partners to ensure that its products are delivering the value that they need, tuning for a greater variety of ARM cores and ensuring that ARM’s tools remain the most cost-effective way to develop software for the ARM HPC ecosystem.

Please visit arm.com/hpc for future ecosystem updates and more details of the open-source and commercial initiatives described here.

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!

Intersect360 Research Takes a Deep Dive into the HPC-AI Market in New Report

May 3, 2024

A new report out of analyst firm Intersect360 Research is shedding some new light on just how valuable the HPC and AI market is. Taking both of these technologies as a singular unit, Intersect360 Research found that the Read more…

Hyperion To Provide a Peek at Storage, File System Usage with Global Site Survey

May 3, 2024

Curious how the market for distributed file systems, interconnects, and high-end storage is playing out in 2024? Then you might be interested in the market analysis that Hyperion Research is planning on rolling out over Read more…

2024 Winter Classic: Meet Team Jackson State

May 3, 2024

This is the second time we’re seeing a team from Jackson State university. The team features two veterans of the 2023 Winter Classic, which should help, but it’s also a team whose members are involved in a lot of oth Read more…

2024 Winter Classic: NASA Results Revealed!

May 2, 2024

In this edition of the Winter Classic Studio Update Show we reveal the results from the NASA BTIO Challenge. The benchmark, BTIO, is a subset of the NAS Parallel benchmark and NASA set up a formidable set of milestones, Read more…

2024 Winter Classic: NASA Mentor Interview

May 2, 2024

The folks at NASA Ames once again did a bang-up job as a mentor for the 2024 Winter Classic. This is the third time they’ve fulfilled this vital function, and their challenges keep getting better and better. In thei Read more…

Qubit Watch: Intel Process, IBM’s Heron, APS March Meeting, PsiQuantum Platform, QED-C on Logistics, FS Comparison

May 1, 2024

Intel has long argued that leveraging its semiconductor manufacturing prowess and use of quantum dot qubits will help Intel emerge as a leader in the race to deliver practical quantum computing - a race that James Clarke Read more…

Hyperion To Provide a Peek at Storage, File System Usage with Global Site Survey

May 3, 2024

Curious how the market for distributed file systems, interconnects, and high-end storage is playing out in 2024? Then you might be interested in the market anal Read more…

Qubit Watch: Intel Process, IBM’s Heron, APS March Meeting, PsiQuantum Platform, QED-C on Logistics, FS Comparison

May 1, 2024

Intel has long argued that leveraging its semiconductor manufacturing prowess and use of quantum dot qubits will help Intel emerge as a leader in the race to de Read more…

Stanford HAI AI Index Report: Science and Medicine

April 29, 2024

While AI tools are incredibly useful in a variety of industries, they truly shine when applied to solving problems in scientific and medical discovery. Research Read more…

IBM Delivers Qiskit 1.0 and Best Practices for Transitioning to It

April 29, 2024

After spending much of its December Quantum Summit discussing forthcoming quantum software development kit Qiskit 1.0 — the first full version — IBM quietly Read more…

Shutterstock 1748437547

Edge-to-Cloud: Exploring an HPC Expedition in Self-Driving Learning

April 25, 2024

The journey begins as Kate Keahey's wandering path unfolds, leading to improbable events. Keahey, Senior Scientist at Argonne National Laboratory and the Uni Read more…

Quantum Internet: Tsinghua Researchers’ New Memory Framework could be Game-Changer

April 25, 2024

Researchers from the Center for Quantum Information (CQI), Tsinghua University, Beijing, have reported successful development and testing of a new programmable Read more…

Intel’s Silicon Brain System a Blueprint for Future AI Computing Architectures

April 24, 2024

Intel is releasing a whole arsenal of AI chips and systems hoping something will stick in the market. Its latest entry is a neuromorphic system called Hala Poin Read more…

Anders Dam Jensen on HPC Sovereignty, Sustainability, and JU Progress

April 23, 2024

The recent 2024 EuroHPC Summit meeting took place in Antwerp, with attendance substantially up since 2023 to 750 participants. HPCwire asked Intersect360 Resear 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…

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…

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…

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…

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…

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…

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…

Leading Solution Providers

Contributors

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…

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…

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…

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…

The GenAI Datacenter Squeeze Is Here

February 1, 2024

The immediate effect of the GenAI GPU Squeeze was to reduce availability, either direct purchase or cloud access, increase cost, and push demand through the roof. A secondary issue has been developing over the last several years. Even though your organization secured several racks... Read more…

Intel Plans Falcon Shores 2 GPU Supercomputing Chip for 2026  

August 8, 2023

Intel is planning to onboard a new version of the Falcon Shores chip in 2026, which is code-named Falcon Shores 2. The new product was announced by CEO Pat Gel 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…

Q&A with Nvidia’s Chief of DGX Systems on the DGX-GB200 Rack-scale System

March 27, 2024

Pictures of Nvidia's new flagship mega-server, the DGX GB200, on the GTC show floor got favorable reactions on social media for the sheer amount of computing po Read more…

  • arrow
  • Click Here for More Headlines
  • arrow
HPCwire