OpenPOWER Foundation

OpenPOWER Foundation

OpenPOWER Logo
Formation August 6, 2013 (2013-08-06)
Founder Google, IBM, Mellanox, NVIDIA, Tyan
Purpose Member companies are enabled to customize POWER CPU processors and system platforms for optimization and innovation for their business needs.
Membership
The foundation has 157 members
Website http://openpowerfoundation.org/

The OpenPOWER Foundation is a collaboration around Power Architecture products initiated by IBM and announced as the "OpenPOWER Consortium" on August 6, 2013.[1] IBM is opening up technology surrounding their Power Architecture offerings, like processor specifications, firmware and software and is offering this on a liberal license and they will be using a collaborative development model with their partners.[2][3]

The goal stated is to enable the server vendor ecosystem to build their own customized server, networking and storage hardware for future data centers and cloud computing.[4]

Power.org is still the governing body around the Power Architecture instruction set but specific implementations are now free to use under a liberal license granted by IBM. Processors based on IBM's IP can now be fabricated on any foundry and mixed with other hardware products of the integrator's choice.

Openness

S812LC.png
IBM S812LC - Habanero - Tyan manufactured OpenPOWER System

IBM is using the word open to describe this project in three ways.[3]

  1. They are licensing the microprocessor technology openly to its partners. They are sharing the blueprints to their hardware and software to their partners, so they can hire IBM or other companies to manufacture processors or other related chips.
  2. They will collaborate openly in an open-collaboration business model where participants share technologies and innovations with each other.
  3. Advantages via open source software such as the Linux operating system.

Hardware

S822LC.png
IBM S822LC - Firestone - Wistron Manufactured OpenPOWER System

IBM is looking to offer the POWER8 chip technology and other future iterations under the OpenPOWER initiative[2] but they are also making previous designs available for licensing.[5] Partners are required to contribute intellectual property to the OpenPOWER Foundation to be able to gain high level status.

The POWER8 processor architecture incorporates facilities to integrate it more easily into custom designs. The generic memory controllers are designed to evolve with future technologies, and the new CAPI (Coherence Attach Processor Interface) expansion bus is built to integrate easily with external coprocessors like GPUs, ASICs and FPGAs.

Nvidia is contributing their fast interconnect technology, NVLink, that will enable tight coupling of Nvidia's Pascal based graphics processors into future POWER processors.[6]

Software

The OpenPOWER initiative will include firmware, the KVM hypervisor and little endian Linux operating system.[2] The foundation has a site on GitHub for the software they are releasing as open source. As of July 2014, they have released firmware to boot Linux.[7]

Canonical Ltd. is working on firmware and general Linux support via their Ubuntu Server version 14.04.[8]

Partners

Google, Tyan, Nvidia and Mellanox are all founding members of the OpenPOWER Foundation.[2] Nvidia is looking to merge their graphics cores and Mellanox to integrate their high performance interconnects with Power cores. Tyan is said to be working on servers using POWER8[9] and Google sees using POWER processors in its data centers as a future possibility.[10] Altera announced support for OpenPOWER in November 2013 with their FPGA offerings and OpenCL software.[11]

On January 19, 2014, the Suzhou PowerCore Technology Company and the Research Institute of Jiangsu Industrial Technology announced that they will join the OpenPOWER Foundation and license POWER8 technologies to promote and help build ecosystems around and design custom made processors for use in big data and cloud computing applications.[12][13]

On February 12, 2014, Samsung Electronics joined.[14][15]

As of March 2014 members also include Altera, Fusion-io, Hynix, Micron, Servergy and Xilinx.

As of April 2014 Canonical, Chuanghe Mobile, Emulex, Hitachi, Inspur, Jülich Research Centre, Oregon State University, Teamsun, Unisource Technology Inc and ZTE are listed as members at various levels.[16]

As of December 2014 Rackspace, Avnet, Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory, Sandia National Laboratories, Tsinghua University, Nallatech, Bull and Qlogic have joined, to bring it to a total of about 80 members.[17]

At the first annual OpenPOWER Summit 2015, the organization announced that there were 113 members, including Wistron, Cirrascale and PMC-Sierra.

To date, the OpenPOWER foundation has over 150 members.

See also

References

  1. Google, IBM, Mellanox, NVIDIA, Tyan Announce Development Group for Data Centers
  2. 1 2 3 4 IBM opens up Power chips, ARM-style, to take on Chipzilla
  3. 1 2 Open and Collaborative Development is the Future of Cloud Computing - IBM's A Smarter Planet blog
  4. IBM's OpenPower consortium with Nvidia, Google aims to advance datacenter
  5. IBM Forms OpenPower Consortium, Breathes New Life Into Power
  6. Open Sourced BIOS Helps Power8 Compete With X86
  7. IBM intros next-gen Power8 microprocessor, servers along with OpenPower roadmap
  8. IBM's new Power8 doubles performance of Watson chip
  9. IBM Gets Allies to Chip Away at Intel
  10. Altera Brings FPGA-based Acceleration to IBM Power Systems and Announces Support for OpenPOWER Consortium
  11. Suzhou PowerCore Technology Co. Intends To Use IBM POWER Technology For Chip Design That Pushes Innovation In China
  12. Suzhou PowerCore to Start Using IBM POWER Tech for New Chip Design in China
  13. IBM Announces that Samsung Electronics Joins OpenPOWER Foundation
  14. Samsung joins IBM, Google in OpenPower alliance
  15. OpenPOWER - Current members
  16. OpenPOWER Gains Momentum Heading into Second Year

External links

Wikimedia Commons has media related to OpenPOWER.
This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Tuesday, October 27, 2015. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.