AMD Volcanic Islands to Implement CPU Cores

AMD’s upcoming generation of graphics cards, dubbed Volcanic Islands, is to include CPU cores on-chip.

AMD's Volcanic Islands - Image Courtesy ChipHell
AMD’s Volcanic Islands – Image Courtesy ChipHell

According to website TechPowerUp!, engineers at AMD have been working on implementing CPU cores in their new GPU design. The result would be a clear departure from previous VLIW4, VLIW5 and GCN, which were all evolutionary architectures instead of complte redesigns. Chinese website Chiphell has leaked what is claimed to be a block-diagram of what could be, by current nomenclature, the AMD HD8970. Codenamed Hawaii, the new Graphics Processing Unit is shown implementing two distinct processing modules: A Parallel Compute Module, which looks like a standard GPU, and a Serial Processing Module, which would take care of serial compute tasks as a CPU would.

The classic GPU part would be based on 16 SPUs for a total of 4096 shader processors, along with 256 TMUs (textue mapping units) and 64 ROPs (render output units). Those numbers represent exactly twice as much theoretical processing power as was present in Tahiti XT, the chip behind Radeon HD7970. It is quite unclear how much CPU power will be present on the chip, though, as the block-diagram is fuzzy and no detailed specifications have been posted. What we can observe are 8 modules that resemble AMD’s current high-performance x86 design, with a shared central floating point unit in each module and shared L3 cache, which would add up to a 16-cores CPU. The whole chip, including CPU and GPU parts, is connected to memory through a 512-bit wide bus.

It is worth noting that AMD also signed a licensing agreement with ARM last year, which could mean that the possibility of ARM cores on AMD chips is not to be excluded. We know from previous announcements from Nvidia that their upcoming all-new architecture will also feature on-die CPU, this time confirmed as an ARMv8 part. Given the timeframe, both Maxwell and AMD’s Volcanic Islands series of GPUs are expected to be built on TSMC’s 20nm bulk process. They should bring enhanced power efficiency, thanks in part to the new 20nm process, and ease of programmability through integrated CPU cores; although we can’t know for sure which one of the designs will prevail in each of the new features.

The next round of the exciting and seemingly never-ending graphics war is to unfold in the last weeks of this year, TSMC’s technology allowing.

dostov

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Avatar of Bobnova
Bobnova

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20,964 messages 1 likes

Well that is an interesting concept I didn't see coming.

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Johan45

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18,290 messages 166 likes

Now that's cool !!

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ATMINSIDE

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23,884 messages 380 likes

So, they've been including GPUs with their CPUs, now they're including CPUs with their GPUs?

Yo dawg, I heard you like...

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Avatar of wagex
wagex

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6,418 messages 55 likes

So, they've been including GPUs with their CPUs, now they're including CPUs with their GPUs?

Yo dawg, I heard you like...

lol i was just about to post this

37646132.jpg

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Avatar of ssjwizard
ssjwizard

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5,583 messages 147 likes
Avatar of Boulard83
Boulard83

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3,474 messages 0 likes

interesting.

+1

Just hope they can make drivers that works and manage it correctly now ...

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Avatar of wagex
wagex

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6,418 messages 55 likes

+1

Just hope they can make drivers that works and manage it correctly now ...

pfffttt keep dreamin!
scary thing is nvidia is doing it too hopefully one of them can figure it out!

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Avatar of trekky
trekky

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1,813 messages 4 likes

lol maybe these can mine LTC in the Mhash/s stock speed!
how does this help gaming?:confused:

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Avatar of wagex
wagex

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6,418 messages 55 likes

perhaps it handles the extra computations that the games need such as location of objects and leaving the cpu free for more taxing things? or perhaps its a more advanced way of thermal / power management?

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Avatar of Culbrelai
Culbrelai

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1,803 messages 9 likes

I thought ARM chips had trouble with something, Windows, X86, X64, something, what was it? It was the reason Microsoft had to make Windows 8 RT for tablets that cannot run 'legacy' (i.e. normal desktop) apps. What would stop the same issue from occuring here?

And what is the point of having CPU cores on a GPU? I missed that about this article.

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