Monday, October 5th 2020

NVIDIA Introduces New Family of BlueField DPUs to Bring Breakthrough Networking, Storage and Security Performance to Every Data Center

NVIDIA today announced a new kind of processor—DPUs, or data processing units—supported by DOCA, a novel data-center-infrastructure-on-a-chip architecture that enables breakthrough networking, storage and security performance.

NVIDIA founder and CEO Jensen Huang revealed the company's three-year DPU roadmap in today's GPU Technology Conference keynote. It features the new NVIDIA BlueField -2 family of DPUs and NVIDIA DOCA software development kit for building applications on DPU-accelerated data center infrastructure services.
"The data center has become the new unit of computing," said Huang. "DPUs are an essential element of modern and secure accelerated data centers in which CPUs, GPUs and DPUs are able to combine into a single computing unit that's fully programmable, AI-enabled and can deliver levels of security and compute power not previously possible."

Optimized to offload critical networking, storage and security tasks from CPUs, BlueField-2 DPUs enable organizations to transform their IT infrastructure into state-of-the-art data centers that are accelerated, fully programmable and armed with "zero-trust" security features to prevent data breaches and cyberattacks.

A single BlueField-2 DPU can deliver the same data center services that could consume up to 125 CPU cores. This frees up valuable CPU cores to run a wide range of other enterprise applications.

Widespread Adoption of NVIDIA DPUs
Leading server manufacturers worldwide—including ASUS, Atos, Dell Technologies, Fujitsu, GIGABYTE, H3C, Inspur, Lenovo, Quanta/QCT and Supermicro—have plans to integrate NVIDIA DPUs into their enterprise server offerings.

These commitments from system providers are complemented by extensive support from software infrastructure partners, including:
  • VMware announced substantial work underway with NVIDIA as part of its recently announced Project Monterey initiative to support BlueField-2 DPUs with VMware Cloud Foundation.
  • Red Hat plans to offer support for BlueField-2 DPUs with Red Hat Enterprise Linux and Red Hat OpenShift, components of Red Hat's open hybrid cloud portfolio, which is used by 95 percent of the Fortune 500.
  • Canonical announced support of BlueField-2 DPUs and DOCA in its Ubuntu Linux platform, the most popular operating system among public clouds.
  • Check Point Software Technologies, a leading cybersecurity provider, is integrating BlueField-2 DPUs into its technologies, which more than 100,000 organizations worldwide use to protect themselves from cyberattacks.
NVIDIA DPU Portfolio:
NVIDIA's current DPU lineup includes two PCIe products:
  • The NVIDIA BlueField-2 DPU, which features all of the capabilities of the NVIDIA Mellanox ConnectX -6 Dx SmartNIC combined with powerful Arm cores. Fully programmable, it delivers data transfer rates of 200 gigabits per second and accelerates key data center security, networking and storage tasks, including isolation, root trust, key management, RDMA/RoCE, GPUDirect, elastic block storage, data compression and more.
  • The NVIDIA BlueField-2X DPU, which includes all the key features of a BlueField-2 DPU enhanced with an NVIDIA Ampere GPU's AI capabilities that can be applied to data center security, networking and storage tasks. Drawing from NVIDIA's third-generation Tensor Cores, it is able to use AI for real-time security analytics, including identifying abnormal traffic, which could indicate theft of confidential data, encrypted traffic analytics at line rate, host introspection to identify malicious activity, and dynamic security orchestration and automated response.
NVIDIA DOCA Software Development Kit
The new NVIDIA DOCA SDK enables developers to build applications on DPU-accelerated data center infrastructure services, much like the NVIDIA CUDA programming model enables developers to build GPU-accelerated applications.

DOCA provides developers a comprehensive, open platform for building software-defined, hardware-accelerated networking, storage, security and management applications running on the BlueField family of DPUs.

DOCA is fully integrated into NVIDIA NGC, a software catalog offering a convenient, containerized software environment for third-party application providers to leverage advanced DPU data-center-accelerated services and to develop, certify and distribute applications to customers.

Availability
BlueField-2 DPUs are sampling now and expected to be featured in new systems from leading server manufacturers in 2021. BlueField-2X DPUs are under development and are also expected to become available in 2021.

DOCA is available for early access partners now.
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12 Comments on NVIDIA Introduces New Family of BlueField DPUs to Bring Breakthrough Networking, Storage and Security Performance to Every Data Center

#2
ZoneDymo
Ermm doesn't every cpu or gpu process...data?
Posted on Reply
#4
Octavean
Sounds like nVidia really wants this to be a thing, so maybe it will be a thing,......then again,....maybe not,.....
Posted on Reply
#5
TheoneandonlyMrK
OctaveanSounds like nVidia really wants this to be a thing, so maybe it will be a thing,......then again,....maybe not,.....
Looks like something melanox have been. Cooking for quite some time, it's likely been in development more than 3 years so I can't see this being a Nvidia direct innovation, though after buying melanox, it is now.
Posted on Reply
#6
FreedomEclipse
~Technological Technocrat~
OctaveanSounds like nVidia really wants this to be a thing, so maybe it will be a thing,......then again,....maybe not,.....
Posted on Reply
#7
T4C Fantasy
CPU & GPU DB Maintainer
looks like it has a Tegra chip and a GA102 chip on the same pcb lol, now im curious
Posted on Reply
#8
Upgrayedd
Can we get a RT only card please?
Posted on Reply
#9
Jism
ZoneDymoErmm doesn't every cpu or gpu process...data?
I think this is for networking traffic, at very, high speeds. And in order to offload the CPU, nvidia found a way to use their hardware as a NPU or something. You could 'train' it as a firewall, you could train it for other things, like advanced DDOS protection or something. Very neat stuff.
Posted on Reply
#10
lexluthermiester
T4C Fantasylooks like it has a Tegra chip and a GA102 chip on the same pcb lol, now im curious
Same here. There's some serious potential here.
Posted on Reply
#11
kingDR
Releasing new things when lack of stock and bots, snatch their shop page. They starting look like fools.
Posted on Reply
#12
lexluthermiester
kingDRReleasing new things when lack of stock and bots, snatch their shop page. They starting look like fools.
Are you sure? Because the GPU die they're using for these cards is NOT the same as the gaming cards. They're a specific ASIC for specific types of data processing. You can't game on these cards.
Posted on Reply
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