>> 1) Comparing a single low power APU to a single high power discrete GPU >> doesn't make sense for HPC. Rather we should compare a rack of equipment >> that can operate in the same power envelope.
> [Joshua] I was comparing, or the paper compares a system (APU) vs a system > (CPU+GPU). and I was comparing a nominal 1200W 1U chassis. current APU chips are, of course, mainly optimized for mobile and low-end desktops, so we have to abstract a bit from them to find anything interesting for HPC: - tighter integration with the CPU - potential improvement with 2.5d integration of ram > If you add the network to it, then you would need to add that too for both, network interfaces, even full-on IB, are pretty minor power-wise (<10W). >> 2) You can bolt GDDR5 onto an APU, eliminating the local bandwidth >> advantage (AMD is doing exactly this for the PS4). Also, we should really >> be comparing the bandwidth available to each GPU "core". > [Joshua] I believe there are power constraints on what you can do with APUs in > terms of high speed memory. not really. high-speed memory is fairly cool (I recall the diagram from Phi listing 1.2-1.3W per gddr5 chip, and that's running at 5 Mt/s! what's expensive is long and/or complicated signals. if you're only running a signal point-to-point, with no sockets or stubs, and a total length of millimeters, power is much less a concern. quite a difference between a GPU/APU and soldered-on gddr5 versus trying to drive multiple banks of socketed ddr3 across inches of board... > That is why you get discrete GPUs burning ~250W > but capable of feeding the streaming cores at an aggregated ~150GB/s from > global memory. actually, current leading addin cards are >= 300 GB/s. but most of the 250W is from the compute cores. though with a power envelope like that, they can certainly they can afford to drive more gddr channels (512b wide, usually). _______________________________________________ Beowulf mailing list, Beowulf@beowulf.org sponsored by Penguin Computing To change your subscription (digest mode or unsubscribe) visit http://www.beowulf.org/mailman/listinfo/beowulf