The New Core-to-Core Communication Paradigm

Within the last week, Intel released a surprising announcement regarding the capability of its upcoming Skylake-SP processors ahead of any official announcement and release, and the relevance of it extends through to the Skylake-X chips as well. With a multi-core design, how cores communicate can be vital, when sharing data between them or by accessing each other’s cache via snooping or having to go out to main memory.

In previous generations, Intel has championed its ring bus strategy. Pretty much every commercial multi-core chip Intel has released uses some form of ring bus, and it boils down to a single communication ring on which all the cores are connected. If data needs to a certain core, it travels on the ring until it reaches the core it needs. The idea is relatively simple, and has worked quite well. It does mean that there is a range of core-to-core latencies however, depending on how far away the core is.

Imagine connecting to a network of computers, but you could only connect to the two computers either side of you. If you needed to speak to a computer that was 5 nodes away, the data would have to travel through each of the nodes to get there. Welcome to the ring bus. The speed of this ring bus was typically denoted by the ‘uncore’ frequency.

With Intel’s three-die program on its enterprise chips, each one used different variants of the ring bus topology. On Broadwell-E, the 10-core LCC design used a single ring bus for all 8 cores and the DRAM controller/PCIe root complex, whereas the HCC and XCC designs both had dual ring buses that used router communication methods to talk between each other. Now obviously talking to a core on the other ring bus added latency, and was sometimes considered a ‘non-uniform memory access’ (NUMA) environment on chip, with extra latency if you needed data from memory on the other ring bus. (Typically NUMA is applied to dual socket platforms, where the DRAM on the other chip has a large delay.) Intel emphasized that the Broadwell-E design was memory location aware, and tried to keep relevant data local to the core it was needed on.

With the larger XCC CPUs for Broadwell-E, the ring buses become quite cumbersome: you end up with one ring bus servicing 12 cores, and another ring bus servicing 12 cores (due to the layout with other elements of the chip).

As more and more cores get added, what is the solution? More ring buses? How about a 2D array of ring buses? Or even a mesh or a network?

The announcement that Intel made in the past week was that Skylake-SP processors will use a mesh topology, whereby each CPU in the design will be connected to the ones above, below, and to the side. Earlier in the week I mentioned on Twitter that a mesh in this context, or as drawn above, is just an array of ring buses in a 2D arrangement, although new information has come to light.

There are several things to talk about the mesh here, so in no particular order:

Mesh Me Up

Intel already sells chips with mesh connectivity: the latest Xeon Phi Knights Landing many-core processors. These massive (~646mm2) chips have 72 cores arranged as 36 pairs, six memory channels and 16GB of MCDRAM, and using a ring bus (or a succession of ring buses) is probably not feasible.

For KNL, Intel calls the mesh the ‘untile’. Taken from the KNL optimization guide:

‘At each mesh stop, there is a connection to the tile and a tag directory that identifies which L2 cache (if any) holds a particular cache line. [In Knights Landing] there is no shared L3 cache within a physical package, [so] memory accesses that miss in the tile must go over the mesh to the tag directory to identify any cached copies in another tile. Cache coherence uses the MESIF protocol. If the cache line is not cached in another tile, then a request goes to memory.’

Knights Landing can run in a variety of mesh modes, due to the lack of an L3 but the presence of an intermediary MCDRAM layer, certain modes to do with the memory hierarchy help with different codes. It is not known if Skylake-SP will have the same feature set.

When distributing cores along a mesh, another way to think about it is as a big routing environment. There are two ways – each core could talk to a central processing router which then sends information as it is needed, or each core acts as a networking point itself, forwarding packets in the direction it is needed. The first method, commonly known as a crossbar method, is easier to implement but can be bottlenecked very easily, not to mention power hungry if the whole crossbar needs to be enabled all the time. The second method, where every core is a router node, looks like what we have already in the image Intel provided.

The announcement Intel made was done officially by Dr Akhilesh Kumar, one of Skylake-SP’s CPU architects. He has been at Intel for a number of years, and digging back through releases with his name on popped up a very interesting paper regarding how to implement a router-like mesh in a multi-core environment, published in March 2014 which is about the right time when Skylake-SPs mesh was being developed. We haven’t had confirmation from Intel that this is how Skylake-SP’s mesh is actually like, though it is worth covering what is in the paper.

For anyone interested, the paper is called MoDe-X: Microarchitecture of a Layout-Aware Modular Decoupled Crossbar for On-Chip Interconnects, IEEE Transactions on Computers, Vol. 63, No. 3, March 2014 P622.

MoDe-X: Is This Skylake-SP’s Mesh?

As mentioned above, the easiest way for a mesh/router is through a crossbar. When the design instead uses each core as a node in the mesh, the result is essentially a ‘mini’ decoupled crossbar in each core acting as the director for data coming in and out of the core. With each core in control of its own actions, the design becomes modular. Put these elements together, and you have a MOdular DEcoupled Crossbar, or MoDe-X.

Each core has an integrated network interface and a router, with each router connected to the four routers around it (or 2 routers for corners and 3 routers for edges). A data packet can come in one of five directions – north, south, east, west, or from the core the router is attached to. The data packet then needs to be sent to one of five directions again: north, south, east, west, or to the core the router is attached to. If each core is essentially a node on a 2D map with an x-ordinate and a y-ordinate, if a packet needs to go to (0,0), the router can send it on its way as it knows which nodes are nearest to it. There are algorithms designed to reduce congestion, such as only moving in the x-direction until you are correct then start moving in the y-direction, but a basic system will have buffers and queues and will know how busy the local network congestion is.

The default way to design the router is to take the date from every input, decided where to send it, then send it. The MoDe-X design does it a little differently, and essentially splits the directions up into three groups: one group is north/south, one group is east/west, and the local core is the third group. The following diagram is a bit complex, but we’ll go through it:

On the left are the five inputs: E, W, L (local), N, S.
On the right are the five outputs, W, E, L, S, N

The first column of ‘shared’ boxes determines where the data wants to go: does it need to traverse a row, a column, or stay local. From each input, there are only two arrows going to either the top pair or the bottom pair of ‘shared’ boxes. Depending on contention and allocation, the data is then sent to the second column whereby if the data needed to change columns, it could either go to Sout or Nout and if it needed to change rows into Wout or Eout. In both circumstances the data could go to the local node.

In the research paper, there is a six-input design which modifies the local input in order to make the wiring in the second half of the design easier (and it lowers power), but the image above is a fair representation of the idea. There are other additions in the paper as well, with layout aware arrangements (how exactly you put it together in silicon) as well as feeder wires such that if data needs to continue in the same direction it can do so with less effort.

The paper is very dense (it took me a while to get to grips with it), but worth a read if you are interested. I found it easier to consider it more like a router, than an on-chip mesh. As mentioned, this is a 2014 paper, and shows simulation data on an 8x8 grid of cores, where this design is both lower power and smaller area than a generic mesh design or competing designs. There were some areas where the generic design had marginally better latency, but the power conservation numbers (due to the wiring reduction and an aggressive power gating scheme to disable certain parts for up to 99% less power use) makes it a more attractive option (especially in multi-core CPUs). Intel was doing simulation work in early 2014 (which means 2013), and the paper mentions that they were in the process of putting these ideas into silicon. It wouldn’t be too far-fetched to consider that this is what we are seeing today.

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  • Gothmoth - Monday, June 19, 2017 - link

    shoody performance.. what are you talking about? stupid games?
    bios updates will fix that.

    could not care less about games. but the intels are faster.. no way around it.
    more pricey but faster.
  • Flying Aardvark - Monday, June 19, 2017 - link

    You nailed it. Between the temps and power draw, to jump on this lineup is really silly. I like the 1700 for a small air cooled mITX setup. If I moved to anything else I'd dump all this stuff in the middle and go straight to Threadripper.

    If you're going for thread count, do it right and get 16C/32T. Or just stick to a nice cool and quiet R5 or R7.
  • cocochanel - Monday, June 19, 2017 - link

    How do they get stomped ? AMD power consumption is about half of that of Intel's.
    Can you please explain ?
  • Yongsta - Monday, June 19, 2017 - link

    Wow, comparing $1000+ high end enthusiast desktop parts vs $500 and lower consumer desktop parts. Wait for Threadripper and Ryzen7 right now offers a lot more bang for the buck (if you get the 1700 and overclock it).
  • tarqsharq - Monday, June 19, 2017 - link

    Those multi-threaded benchmarks are going to get really ugly for Intel in a few months I think, especially from a bang for buck perspective.
  • T1beriu - Monday, June 19, 2017 - link

    Wrong name: derba8ur

    Real name: der8auer

    Page 6.
  • Ryan Smith - Monday, June 19, 2017 - link

    Thanks!
  • jjj - Monday, June 19, 2017 - link

    A lot of talk about the mesh but not testing it, at least the basic memory BW, latency and scaling.
    No power numbers at all? No OC and temps....
    Why focus on perf and ignore all else when perf is more or less a known quantity and the unanswered questions are elsewhere.

    For Intel you list all Turbo flavors, for AMD you forget XFR when comparing SKUs.
  • Luckz - Monday, June 19, 2017 - link

    http://www.tomshardware.com/reviews/intel-core-i9-... has you covered re the mesh
  • jjj - Monday, June 19, 2017 - link

    PCPer tries to look at it too.

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