Article 3QTVP Assessing Cavium's ThunderX2: The Arm Server Dream Realized At Last

Assessing Cavium's ThunderX2: The Arm Server Dream Realized At Last

by
Johan De Gelas
from on (#3QTVP)
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A little less than 2 years ago, we investigated the first Arm server SoC that had a chance to compete with midrange Xeon E5s: the Cavium ThunderX. The SoC showed promise, however the low single-threaded performance and some power management issues relegated the 48-core SoC to more niche markets such as CDN and Web caching. In the end, Cavium's first server SoC was not a real threat to Intel's Xeon.

But Cavium did not give up. The new creation of underdog Cavium deserves the benefit of the doubt. Much has changed - much more than the name alone lets on - as Cavium has bought the "Vulcan" design from Avago. Vulcan is a rather ambitious CPU design which was originally designed by the Arm server SoC team of Broadcom. Based on its experience from the ThunderX, Cavium was able to take what they've learned thus far and have introduced some microarchitectural improvements to the Vulcan design to improve its performance and power.

As a result, ThunderX2 is a much more "brainiac" core than the previous generation. While the ThunderX core had a very short pipeline and could hardly sustain 2 instructions per clock, the Vulcan core was designed to fetch 8 and execute up to 4 instructions per clock. It gets better: 4 simultaneous threads can be active (SMT4), ensuring that the wide back-end is busy most of the time. 32 of those cores at clockspeeds up to 2.5 GHz find a home in the new ThunderX2 SoC.

To that end, today we are comparing this new contender for the server CPU market with the mighty Xeon Platinum 8176 as well as AMD's EPYC. Can Cavium finally deliver on the promise of a performant and efficient Arm CPU for servers? Let's find out!

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