EUPEX partners CINI / University of Bologna, E4 and CINECA had a research paper accepted at the 2022 IEEE 35th International System-on-Chip Conference (SOCC).
The new open and royalty-free RISC-V ISA is attracting interest across the whole computing continuum, from microcontrollers to supercomputers. High-performance RISC-V processors and accelerators have been announced, but RISC-V-based HPC systems will need a holistic co-design effort, spanning memory, storage hierarchy interconnects and full software stack. In this paper, we describe Monte Cimone, a fully-operational multi-blade computer prototype and hardware-software test-bed based on U740, a double-precision capable multi-core, 64-bit RISC-V SoC. Monte Cimone does not aim to achieve strong floating-point performance, but it was built with the purpose of “priming the pipe” and exploring the challenges of integrating a multi-node RISC-V cluster capable of providing an HPC production stack including interconnect, storage and power monitoring infrastructure on RISC-V hardware. We present the results of our hardware/software integration effort, which demonstrate a remarkable level of software and hardware readiness and maturity – showing that the first generation of RISC-V HPC machines may not be so far in the future.
Authors: Andrea Bartolini (Università di Bologna), Federico Ficarelli (CINECA), Emanuele Parisi (Università di Bologna), Francesco Beneventi (Università di Bologna), Francesco Barchi (Università di Bologna), Daniele Gregori (E4), Fabrizio Magugliani (E4), Marco Cicala (E4), Cosimo Gianfreda (E4), Daniele Cesarini (CINECA), Andrea Acquaviva (Università di Bologna), Luca Benini (Università di Bologna / ETH Zürich)