Tuesday, April 9th 2024

Micron Debuts World's First Quad-Port SSD to Accelerate Data-Rich Autonomous and AI-Enabled Workloads

Micron Technology, Inc., today announced it is sampling the automotive-grade Micron 4150AT SSD, the world's first quad-port SSD, capable of interfacing with up to four systems on chips (SoCs) to centralize storage for software-defined intelligent vehicles. The Micron 4150AT SSD combines market-leading features such as single-root input/output virtualization (SR-IOV), a PCIe Generation 4 interface and ruggedized automotive design. With these features, the automotive-grade SSD provides the ecosystem with data center-level flexibility and power.

"As storage requirements race to keep up with rich in-vehicle experiences featuring AI and advanced algorithms for higher levels of autonomous safety, this era demands a new paradigm for automotive storage to match," said Michael Basca, Micron vice president of embedded products and systems. "Building on our collaboration with the innovators redefining next-generation automotive architectures, Micron has reimagined storage from the ground up to deliver the world's first quad-port SSD - the Micron 4150AT - which provides the industry flexibility and horsepower to roll out the transformative technologies on the horizon."
Micron's 4150AT SSD brings enterprise-class speeds to consumer vehicles, with random read and write speeds above 600,000 input/output operations per second (IOPS) and above 100,000 IOPS, respectively, for a 4-kilobyte transfer. This high performance allows the drive to efficiently manage data streams from multiple SoCs at once, making it an ideal solution for vehicles that must increasingly multitask to handle diverse systems, from advanced driver-assistance systems (ADAS) to in-vehicle infotainment (IVI) to AI-enabled cabin experiences.

Micron built its 4150AT SSD to provide powerful, customizable features inspired by the design of data center SSDs but tailored to the unique challenges of next-generation automotive architectures including:
  • Multi-port capability: The first SSD across any end market with four ports, the Micron 4150AT SSD can connect up to four SoCs, bringing unmatched flexibility and creating a single source of truth. For example, an automotive OEM can connect one port to an ADAS system and another to an IVI system, allowing each to store private data while accessing a common set of critical map data and reducing cost per gigabyte of storage. This boosts performance and dissolves bottlenecks as both can access shared data simultaneously and alleviates the need to keep redundant copies of data. The 4150AT's quad ports also reduce the need for extra storage devices. Since existing solutions can typically connect to only one SoC on their own, they tend to get placed locally with each automotive system - leading to unused capacity; or alternatively, require OEMs to utilize a costly automotive-grade PCIe switch to connect a drive to multiple SoCs. By centralizing storage for multiple systems, the SSD dramatically improves efficiency while streamlining architecture.
  • Virtualization: The 4150AT's SR-IOV capability provides high performance for heavy multi-host workloads of up to 64 virtual machines (VMs). The unique virtualization gives each SoC and its virtual machines an isolated storage region for local processing while sharing a pool of storage, maximizing efficiency. This support for multi-host workloads is essential as today's automotive SoCs increasingly use VMs to multitask across different functions, from autonomous driving to vehicle-to-vehicle communication. The SR-IOV capability offers an advantage by directing input/outputs (I/Os) from the VMs directly to the SSD hardware, contrasting with the typical paravirtualization in which I/Os are routed through a software hypervisor to the SSD, creating latency. By bypassing the software layer, the drive improves random read performance up to three times.
  • Boosted security: Due to its unique virtualization, the 4150AT drive also enables increased security for carmakers. Based on the SR-IOV virtualization, the data of each VM is isolated from others in the hardware to mitigate data or code leakage while curtailing hacking attempts in one VM from compromising another - maintaining critical data privacy and security.
  • Customizable endurance modes: Micron's 4150AT SSD is built with its triple-level cell (TLC) NAND but can be configured to support single-level cell (SLC) and high-endurance (HE-SLC) data endurance groups too, which respectively offer 20 times and 50 times the endurance of TLC, to best meet unique data requirements. For example, the HE-SLC endurance group can be used for heavy-write use cases such as continuous black box data recording, in which cars must constantly rerecord critical data from sensors, cameras and lidar. In such a scenario where data is being programmed and erased every few minutes, the HE-SLC mode offers the required endurance while eliminating the need for more expensive volatile memory such as DRAM.
  • Designed for the automotive industry's rigorous requirements: The Micron 4150AT SSD delivers Automotive Safety Integrity Level B (ASIL-B) capability to support safety system requirements and is offered in a ball grid array package to help withstand the shock and vibration typical of vehicles' rugged environments. Like all of the solutions in Micron's automotive-grade portfolio, the drive is engineered to withstand the extended temperature ranges found in vehicles.
Micron is now delivering samples of the 4150AT SSD to automotive customers worldwide. The drive is offered in capacities up to 1.8 terabytes to enable efficient storage of AI algorithms, large language models, advanced infotainment and telemetry data for the next generation of vehicles. The company is showcasing a demo of the SSD at Embedded World in Nuremberg, Germany from April 9-11 at booth 5-109.
Source: Micron
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6 Comments on Micron Debuts World's First Quad-Port SSD to Accelerate Data-Rich Autonomous and AI-Enabled Workloads

#1
Wirko
Virtual machines running critical control systems in a car. There's nothing that can go wrong here, right? Right?
Posted on Reply
#2
mechtech
WirkoVirtual machines running critical control systems in a car. There's nothing that can go wrong here, right? Right?
My old 76 (sold long ago) laughs at this and everything electrical and electronic. (with exception to wipers and lights)

I miss that truck............
Posted on Reply
#3
bonehead123
WirkoVirtual machines running critical control systems in a car. There's nothing that can go wrong here, right? Right?
Yea, like one of them telling you that you've been in accident, calling the sheriff, fire truck, and ambulance for you, while automatically interfacing with your insurance company & filing your claim for you (and processing your cancellation notice too), while in the background, telling them that it was all your fault, for which they are also silently reporting it to the DMV and assessing the points onto your driving record.....

yee haw....nothin to worry about, nuthin at all /s
Posted on Reply
#4
trsttte
WirkoVirtual machines running critical control systems in a car. There's nothing that can go wrong here, right? Right?
Actually no, with virtual machine one can crash and the rest of ECU can keep going until a watchdog reboots the affected part. But the more relevant part of this is that the memory can be directly accessed between different cpus instead of having to send messages between them and only one writes to memory.
Posted on Reply
#5
Minus Infinity
WirkoVirtual machines running critical control systems in a car. There's nothing that can go wrong here, right? Right?
Well it could be worse, they could be using floppy disks!
Posted on Reply
#6
xorbe
Minus InfinityWell it could be worse, they could be using floppy disks!
Some oem nav systems used to have a hidden dvd reader within the dash, iirc.
Posted on Reply
Dec 3rd, 2024 13:13 EST change timezone

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