Sunway (processor)
Appearance
This article includes a list of general references, but it lacks sufficient corresponding inline citations. (October 2011) |
Sunway, or ShenWei, (Chinese:申威), is a series of microprocessors developed by Jiāngnán Computing Lab (江南计算技术研究所) in Wuxi, China. Details of the architecture are still sparse.
History of Sunway processors
The Sunway series of microprocessors was developed primarily for the use of the military of the People's Republic of China. The original microarchitecture is believed to be inspired by DEC Alpha.[1] [2] The SW-3 in particular is felt to be based on the Alpha 21164.[3]
Sunway SW-1
- First generation, 2006
- Single-core
- 900 MHz
Sunway SW-2
- Second generation, 2008
- Dual-core
- 1400 MHz
- SMIC 130 nm process
- 70–100 W
Sunway SW-3 / SW1600
- Third generation, 2010
- 16-core, 64-bit RISC [4]
- 975–1200 MHz [4]
- 65 nm process
- 140.8 GFLOPS @ 1.1 GHz
- Max memory capacity: 16 GB
- Peak memory bandwidth: 68 GB/s
- Quad-channel 128-bit DDR3
- Four-issue superscalar
- Two integer and two floating-point execution units
- 7-stage integer pipeline and 10-stage floating-point pipeline
- 43-bit virtual address and 40-bit physical address
- Up to 8 TB virtual memory and 1 TB of physical memory supported
- L1 cache: 8 KB instruction cache and 8 KB data cache[4]
- L2 cache: 96 KB[4]
- 128-bit system bus
Sunway SW26010
- Fourth generation, 2016
- 64-bit RISC processor
- Manycore architecture, with 4 CPU clusters on a chip, each comprising 64 lightweight compute CPUs with an additional management CPU, linked by a network-on-a-chip
See also
- Sunway BlueLight
- Sunway TaihuLight
- Loongson - another Chinese MIPS compatible processor architecture
- Phytium Mars, Chinese ARMv8 architecture processor for supercomputing.
References
- ^ hswz (2009-05-04). "Jiangnan Computing Lab's Civilian CPU Debut - SW-1". bbs.lemote.com. Retrieved 2011-10-31.
- ^ "LinkedIn profile: Chen Gang". LinkedIn.
- ^ Hung-Sheng Tsao (2011-10-29). "SW1600 and Alpha 21164". LaoTsao's Weblog. Retrieved 2011-10-29.
- ^ a b c d Novakovic, Nebojsa (26 December 2011). "Chinese high end CPUs are now in the game – details: Part 2, Alpha". VR-Zone. Retrieved 22 June 2016.