CXL Specification 1.0 Released: New Industry High-Speed Interconnect From Intel
by Ian Cutress on March 11, 2019 9:00 AM EST- Posted in
- CPUs
- Intel
- GPUs
- DRAM
- Interconnect
- FPGAs
- Compute Express Link
- CXL
With the battleground moving from single core performance to multi-core acceleration, a new war is being fought with how data is moved around between different compute resources. The Interconnect Wars are truly here, and the battleground just got a lot more complicated. We’ve seen NVLink, CCIX, and GenZ come out in recent years as offering the next generation of host-to-device and device-to-device high-speed interconnect, with a variety of different features. Now CXL, or Compute Express Link, is taking to the field.
This new interconnect, for which the version 1.0 specification is being launched today, started in the depths of Intel’s R&D Labs over four years ago, however what was made is being launched as an open standard, headed up by a consortium of nine companies. These companies include Alibaba, Cisco, Dell EMC, Facebook, Google, HPE, Huawei, Intel, and Microsoft, which as a collective was described as one of the companies as ‘the biggest group of influencers driving a modern interconnect standard’.
In our call, we were told that the specification is actually been in development for a few years at Intel, and was only lifted recently to drive a new consortium around an open cache coherent interconnect standard. The upcoming consortium of the nine founding companies will be incorporated later this year, working under US rules. The consortium states that members will be free to use the IP on any device, and aside from the nine founders, other companies can become contributors and/or adopters, depending on if they want to use the technology or help contribute to the next standard.
At its heart, Compute Express Link (CXL) will initially begin as a cache-coherent host-to-device interconnect, focusing on GPUs and FPGAs. It will use current PCIe 5.0 standards for physical connectivity and electrical standards, providing protocols for I/O and memory with coherency interfaces. The focus of CXL is to help accelerate AI, machine learning, media services, HPC, and cloud applications. With Intel being at the heart of this technology, we might expect to see future Intel GPUs and FPGAs connecting in a PCIe slot in ‘CXL’ mode. It will be interesting to see if this will be an additional element of the product segmentation strategy.
While some of the competing standards have 20-50+ members, the Compute Express Link actually has more founding members than PCIe (5) or USB (7). That being said however, there are a few key names in the industry missing: Amazon, Arm, AMD, Xilinx, etc. Other standards playing in this space, such as CCIX and GenZ, have common members with CXL, and when questioned on this, the comment from CXL was that GenZ made a positive comment to the CXL press release - they stated that there is a lot of synergy between CXL and GenZ, and they expect the standards to dovetail rather than overlap. It should be pointed out that Xilinx, Arm, and AMD have already stated core CCIX support, either plausible future support or in products at some level, making this perhaps another VHS / Betamax battle. The other missing company is NVIDIA, who are more than happy with NVLink and its association with IBM.
The Compute Express Link announcement is part standard and part recruitment – the as-yet consortium is looking for contributors and adopters. Other CPU architectures beyond x86 are more than welcome, with the Intel representative stating that he is happy to jump on a call to explain the company’s motivation behind the new standard. Efforts are currently underway to develop the CXL 2.0 Specification.
CXL Promoter Statements of Support
Dell EMC
“Dell EMC is delighted to be part of the CXL Consortium and its all-star cast of promoter companies. We are encouraged to see the true openness of CXL, and look forward to more industry players joining this effort. The synergy between CXL and Gen-Z is clear, and both will be important components in supporting Dell EMC’s kinetic infrastructure and this data era.”
Robert Hormuth, Vice President & Fellow, Chief Technology Officer, Server & Infrastructure Systems, Dell EMC
“Facebook is excited to join CXL as a founding member to enable and foster a standards-based open accelerator ecosystem for efficient and advanced next generation systems.”
Vijay Rao, Director of Technology and Strategy, Facebook
“Google supports the open Compute Express Link collaboration. Our customers will benefit from the rich ecosystem that CXL will enable for accelerators, memory, and storage technologies.”
Rob Sprinkle, Technical Lead, Platforms Infrastructure, Google LLC
HPE
“At HPE we believe that being able to compose compute resources over open interfaces is critical if our industry is to keep pace with the demands of a data and AI-driven future. We applaud Intel for opening up the interface to the processor. CXL will help customers utilize accelerators more efficiently and dovetails well with the open Gen-Z memory-semantic interconnect standard to aid in building fully-composable, workload-optimized systems.”
Mark Potter, HPE CTO and Director of Hewlett Packard Labs
Huawei
“Being a leading provider in the industry, Huawei will play an important role in the contribution of technology specification. Huawei’s intelligent computing products which incorporates Huawei’s chip, acceleration components and intelligent management together with innovative optimized system design, can deliver end-to-end solutions which significantly improves the rollout and system efficiency of data centers.”
Zhang Xiaohua, GM of Huawei’s Intelligent Computing BU
Intel
“CXL is an important milestone for data-centric computing, and will be a foundational standard for an open, dynamic accelerator ecosystem. Like USB and PCI Express, which Intel also co-founded, we can look forward to a new wave of industry innovation and customer value delivered through the CXL standard.”
Jim Pappas, Director of Technology Initiatives, Intel Corporation
Microsoft
“Microsoft is joining the CXL consortium to drive the development of new industry bus standards to enable future generations of cloud servers. Microsoft strongly believes in industry collaboration to drive breakthrough innovation. We look forward to combining efforts of the consortium with our own accelerated hardware achievements to advance emerging workloads from deep learning to high performance computing for the benefit of our customers.”
Dr. Leendert van Doorn, Distinguished Engineer, Azure, Microsoft
Gen-Z Consortium
“As a Consortium founded to encourage an open ecosystem for the next-generation memory and compute architectures, Gen-Z welcomes Compute Express Link (CXL) to the industry and we look forward to opportunities for future collaboration between our organizations.”
Kurtis Bowman, President, Gen-Z Consortium
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aryonoco - Monday, March 11, 2019 - link
Please let your publisher know that I love AT and it's one of my favourite websites, but there is no way I can ever browse it without a strict ad blocker in place. I hate that I can't support AT's writers and editors who do such fantastic work. If there was a reasonably priced monthly subscription program similar to Ars Technica Pro which would allow me to support the website and not be served ads, I'd love that.johnnycanadian - Tuesday, March 12, 2019 - link
Agreed 100%! Ars is $50 per year and you get a Yubikey when you commit for the 12 month period. I'm happy to commit to paying that should the option become available on AT. Or make it $30 per year without any throw-ins. Either way, I'm in.SirPerro - Wednesday, March 13, 2019 - link
Holy shit. As if 2.3MB for a web page wasn't massive enough.ET - Tuesday, March 12, 2019 - link
I don't know what you consider an ad. One is a video of 'how to choose an SSD / CPU / whatever', one is an ad. Having videos run automatically is very distracting, and when one can't be paused is just too annoying. I'm fine with text ads, though.ET - Monday, March 11, 2019 - link
Installed AdBlock for the first time, set it to block only Anandtech. Sad, but necessary. At least Anandtech is readable now.PeachNCream - Monday, March 11, 2019 - link
Wow, after all this there's a second video advert now? I guess the answer to people saying, "Hey, that video in the middle of the article is too much, please find a different way," was to flip the bird and double down.mode_13h - Monday, March 11, 2019 - link
The carnival freak show that's emerging from the ads right above the comments is what's pushing me close to the edge.ET - Tuesday, March 12, 2019 - link
Had that in the past. I guess the ad server eventually got that I'm less likely to close the page outright if I see pictures of gadgets and good looking women.willis936 - Monday, March 11, 2019 - link
Another oneDmcq - Monday, March 11, 2019 - link
Be interesting when it has been investigated a bit. For instance how much does it affect the internal coherency protocol of a chip? Would there for instance be some nasty interaction with Arm's latest interconnect where they probably took CCIX into consideration? Or will it be like GenZ that the standards will probably eventually converge?