Editor’s Note: This content is contributed by Thomas Bollaert, Senior Director, Software Acceleration Tools
On the first day at XDF 2018, AWS gave a presentation on how to accelerate development, test, and deployment of FPGA-accelerated applications on AWS EC2 F1.
Five announcements by AWS
Kris King, AWS Design Verification Manager – Silicon Optimization, made five major announcements:
New Availability Regions
Responding to customer demand, AWS is expanding F1 instances in three news regions: London, Frankfurt, and Sidney. This brings the total number of regions with F1 instances to seven. It’s great to see increased demand for F1 instances, and Sidney is the first in Asia-PAC.
New Instance Size
The f1.4xlarge provides access to two FPGA and eight virtual CPUs, which is twice the compute resources of the basic f1.2xlarge. This opens a lot of new capabilities, and Kris said that customers were very excited about this new platform.
Virtual Ethernet
Virtual Ethernet provides direct network access in the FPGA. Network packets are streamed to the FPGA. The CPU runs the Data Plane Development Kit (DPDK). This is a great solution to accelerate network packet processing workloads.
DRAM Data Retention
DRAM data retention allows downloading a new FPGA image in the device, while retaining the contents of the DDR memory. The new FPGA image can process the data already present in DDR. This saves the overhead of copying data back and forth between the host and the FPGA before and after loading a new FPGA image. Thus, chaining the execution of multiple FPGA images is much more efficient.
Vivado 2018.2
The last announcement of the day, but not the least, AWS announced the integration of Vivado 2018.2 and SDAccel on the F1 platform on October 2. Xilinx has provided a reconfigurable acceleration stack that reduces the time to market for FPGA solutions with libraries, tools, frameworks, OpenCL, and OpenStack support for several Data Center workloads. The 2018.2 release provides important new capabilities to help customers visualize the performance of their application and provides guidance on how to optimize it. This is great news for all SDAccel users on AWS.
Kris concluded his presentation with a demo of a financial application running on F1. He used the AWS Batch service to spawn 50 stock pricing jobs.
My Take
It was impressive to see how the service could easily start any number of instances on-demand and execute the requested application. Even more impressive was to see that FPGA implementation would run in about 0.18 seconds while the software version running on CPU took about 120 seconds per job. AWS continues to invest in the F1 platform and it is getting better and more capable with every new release. Without a doubt, this is driven by customer demand and confirms that FPGA-as-a-Service and AWS F1 are real successes.
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If you want to learn more about SDAccel Development Environment for cloud acceleration, visit https://www.xilinx.com/products/design-tools/software-zone/sdaccel.html
Amazon EC2 F1 instances offered in three different sizes that include either one, four, or eight FPGAs per instance. F1 instances include 16nm Xilinx Virtex UltraScale+ FPGAs. To learn more Xilinx Virtex UltraScale+ FPGAs, visit https://www.xilinx.com/products/silicon-devices/fpga/virtex-ultrascale-plus.html
Original Date: 10-16-2018