Tuesday, November 29th 2022

AWS Updates Custom CPU Offerings with Graviton3E for HPC Workloads

Amazon Web Services (AWS) cloud division is extensively developing custom Arm-based CPU solutions to suit its enterprise clients and is releasing new iterations of the Graviton series. Today, during the company re:Invent week, we are getting a new CPU custom-tailored to high-performance computing (HPC) workloads called Graviton3E. Given that HPC workloads require higher bandwidth, wider datapaths, and data types span in multiple dimensions, AWS redesigned the Graviton3 processor and enhanced it with new vector processing capabilities with a new name—Graviton3E. This CPU is promised to offer up to 35% higher performance in workloads that depend on heavy vector processing.

With the rising popularity of HPC in the cloud, AWS sees a significant market opportunity and is trying to capture it. Available in the AWS EC2 instance types, this chip will be available with up to 64 vCPU cores and 128 GiB of memory. The supported EC2 tiers that will offer this enhanced chip are C7gn and Hpc7g instances that provide 200 Gbps of dedicated network bandwidth that is optimized for traffic between instances in the same VPC. In addition, Intel-based R7iz instances are available for HPC users in the cloud, now powered by 4th generation Xeon Scalable processors codenamed Sapphire Rapids.
Sources: AWS Blog, TechCrunch (Image)
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4 Comments on AWS Updates Custom CPU Offerings with Graviton3E for HPC Workloads

#1
defaultluser
they keep adding new architectures, so these mus be popular
Posted on Reply
#2
dragontamer5788
defaultluserthey keep adding new architectures, so these mus be popular
I wouldn't be surprised if they were less popular, but still made more money for Amazon. ARM licenses are relatively cheap, and computers are cheap in general.
Posted on Reply
#3
trsttte
Intel take notice, you won't sell subscriptions for that long
Posted on Reply
#4
defaultluser
dragontamer5788I wouldn't be surprised if they were less popular, but still made more money for Amazon. ARM licenses are relatively cheap, and computers are cheap in general.
that's what I mean - they must be growing in demand at appreciable rate to justify these pretty regular updates for AWS
Posted on Reply
Nov 18th, 2024 19:50 EST change timezone

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