Monday, November 18, 2024

Nvidia, Google to Speak About RISC-V Use at Annual Summit

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Nvidia will discuss how it uses the RISC-V architecture at the RISC-V Summit from October 22 to 24. The GPU maker has used the RISC-V CPU architecture in its GPU microcontrollers for nine years. A 20-minute keynote from Frans Sijstermans, vice president at Nvidia, will be held on October 22 and will reveal additional details.

Staffers from Google, including software engineer Cliff Young, who was a designer of the TPU, will talk about the benefits of RISC-V in AI chips. The TPUs are based on RISC-V architecture.

There may be many more surprises in store. At last year’s RISC-V Summit, Qualcomm declared its long-term commitment to RISC-V amid its legal battle with ARM, and Meta shared more details about how it would use RISC-V designs.

The influence of RISC-V is growing every year as companies look for cheaper and faster ways to design CPUs. The RISC-V open instruction set architecture is free to license and provides customers with the flexibility to include their features in silicon. Customers can top it off with proprietary extensions.

(Source: RISC-V International)

Like Nvidia, Apple also uses RISC-V microcontrollers in its M-series CPUs. At its recent developer summit, Samsung said it ported its TizenOS to RISC-V, which is used in its TVs. Most hardware and cloud providers are supporters of RISC-V.

RISC-V is trying to capture a market of customers exhausted with proprietary options that include x86 and ARM. The x86 is showing signs of life with improved power efficiency and a new alliance between Intel and AMD to protect x86 interests.

Google, Microsoft, and AWS have developed homegrown processors based on ARM.

Research firm Omdia forecasts that RISC-V-based processor shipments could reach 17 billion processors in 2030. About 46% of that number will be chips used in automobiles, the research firm said.

RISC-V International, which manages the architecture development, believes it will reach servers and PCs. But many admit that may take years.

The discussions at the RISC-V Summit will also include AI, GPU, and server specifications updates. RISC-V has poor software support, and some discussions will focus on support for packages and operating systems.

Going into the summit, several issues also cloud RISC-V. Security is on the agenda this year after zero presence last year. There are many sessions on RISC-V security covering confidential computing, cryptographic extensions, and safety modules.

Researchers earlier this year disclosed a RISC-V related hack called “Ghostwrite,” which allows users to bypass protections and access privileged memory in Alibaba’s RISC-V Xuantie C910 chip design. The chip was released many years ago.

Alibaba is a sponsor of this year’s RISC-V Summit. In August, it released R908, a chip for embedded devices with many new safety extensions.

RISC-V has also attracted the attention of U.S. politicians, who are concerned about China’s doubling down on the architecture.

Security researchers are concerned that Chinese companies could ship RISC-V chips into U.S. devices with backdoors that could make them vulnerable. It is hard to patch RISC-V chips as, unlike x86 chips, there are no microcode capabilities.

The political intrigue surrounding RISC-V is not on the agenda.

Some companies have discussed selling RISC-V chiplets, but manufacturing won’t be discussed extensively at the RISC-V Summit.

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