Advanced Computing in the Age of AI | Friday, April 19, 2024

Move It: Gen-Z Consortium Vows New Semantic Fabric for Data Movement at Scale 

Industry powerhouses have joined forces to address an issue that has confounded system architects since the advent of multi-core computing, one that has gained in urgency with the emergence of data analytics: the need to bring balance between processing power and data access. The Gen-Z Consortium has set out to create a scalable, open, high-performance semantic fabric interconnect aimed at simplifying data access at rack scale in support of the growing demand for real time analytics workloads.

Vowing to enable Gen-Z system availability in 2018, the consortium’s mission is to address what it says are obsolete “programmatic and architectural assumptions”: that storage is slow, persistent, and reliable while data in memory is fast but volatile, assumptions the consortium contends are no longer optimal in the face of new storage-class memory technologies, which converge storage and memory attributes. A new approach to data access that takes on the challenges of explosive data growth, real-time application requirements, the emergence of low-latency storage class memory and demand for rack scale resource pools - these are the consortium's objectives.

“As proposed, Gen-Z is a truly open memory semantic fabric and standard (which means it is in the memory domain and not in the I/O domain) and is an impactful step for the industry,” Jimmy Pike, technologist in residence at consulting group Moor Insights & Strategy, told EnterpriseTech. “If you examine the sheer explosion of data, how we need to quickly and securely access it from hundreds of nodes, and the rapid and accelerating pace of software innovation, we seem to be begging for this type of resource.”

Pike said if storage class memory is added into the already tiered memory system of today, many parts of system architectures would be stretched beyond their limits. But “Gen-Z promises to foster the next step of system evolution. The amazing part is that so many of the industry leaders recognize this need and see the importance of making it a truly open standard.”

Gen-Z brings together 19 companies (Cray, Dell EMC, HPE, IBM, Mellanox, Micron, Seagate, Xilinx and others) and bills itself as a transparent, non-proprietary standards body that will develop a “flexible, high-performance memory semantic fabric (providing) a peer-to-peer interconnect that easily accesses large volumes of data while lowering costs and avoiding today’s bottlenecks.” The not-for-profit organization said it will operate like other open source entities and will make the Gen-Z standard free of charge.

Kurtis Bowman, director, server solutions, Office of the CTO, at consortium member Dell EMC, told EnterpriseTech that 12 of the member companies have worked for the past year to develop what he called a “.7- or .8-level spec” on the fabric, “so there’s still opportunity for new members to contribute to the spec, make it stronger,” but enough work has been done “with the spec in proving out that the technology itself is right.”

“We get asked a lot, ‘Why the new bus?’” he said. “It’s because there’s really nothing that today solves all the problems that we think exist. One is that memory is flat or shrinking in the servers that we have today. So the bandwidth per core is shrinking to a point where today we have less bandwidth per core than we did in 2003. The memory capacity per core is shrinking, the IO per core is shrinking. It really comes down to there’s just not enough pins on the processor to be able to get the requisite amount of memory and IO that you need.”

He emphasized the need to solve this challenge as real-time workloads are increasingly adopted “You have to be able to quickly analyze the data coming in, get some insights from that data, because as it takes longer to analyze that data, your time to insights pushes out and it makes it less valuable. So we want to make it so it’s easier to get compute and data closer together and allow those to be done” in a standardized way, across CPUs, GPUs, FPGAs and other architectures. “All of them need access to the memory that’s available.”

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Gen-Z said it aims to provide:

  • High bandwidth and low latency via a simplified interface based on memory semantics, scalable to 112GT/s and beyond with DRAM-class latencies.
  • Support for advanced workloads by enabling data-centric computing with scalable memory pools and resources for real time analytics and in-memory applications.
  • Software compatibility with no required changes to the operating system while scaling from simple, low cost connectivity to highly capable, rack scale interconnect.

Gartner Group’s Chirag Dekate, research director, HPC, servers, emerging technologies, said the consortium’s focus on data movement has important implications on high-growth segments of the advanced scale computing market, such as data analytics and machine learning, that utilize coprocessors and accelerators.

“These technologies are crucial in delivering the much needed computational boost for the underlying applications,” Dekate told EnterpriseTech. “These architectures are biased towards extreme compute capability. However, this results in IO bottlenecks across the stack.”

He said coprocessors and accelerators utilize the PCIe bus to synchronize host and device memories, despite there being roughly three orders of magnitude difference between the FLOPS-rate and the bandwidth of the underlying PCIe bus. “This essentially translates to dramatic inefficiencies in performance, especially in instances where there isn’t sufficient parallelism to hide the data access latencies,” said Dekate. “This problem is only going to get worse as the computational capability of core architectures evolve more rapidly than the supporting memory subsystems, resulting in a fundamental mismatch between data movement within a compute node and the floating point rate of modern processors.”

Initiatives like Gen-Z are crucial for addressing the data movement challenges that emerging compute platforms are facing, he said. “The success of Gen-Z will depend on the consortium’s ability to expand and integrate broader scale of processor vendors to be able to have the broadest impact in customer datacenters.”

Gen-Z said it expects to have the core specification, covering the architecture and protocol, finalized in late 2016. Proof systems developed on FPGAs will follow with fully Gen-Z enabled systems on track for mid-2018. Other consortium members include AMD, ARM, Cavium Inc., Huawei, IDT, Lenovo, Microsemi, Red Hat, SK Hynix and Western Digital.

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