MIOpen: The Radeon Instinct Software Stack

While solid hardware is the necessary starting point for building a deep learning product platform, as AMD has learned the hard way over the years, it takes more than good hardware to break into the HPC market. Software is just as important as hardware (if not more so), as software developers want to get to as close to plug-and-play as possible. For this reason, frameworks and libraries that do a lot of the heavy lifting for developers are critical. Case in point, along with the Tesla hardware, the other secret ingredient in NVIDIA’s deep learning stable has been cuDNN and their other libraries, which have moved most of the effort of implementing deep learning systems off of software developers and on to NVIDIA. This is the kind of ecosystem AMD needs to be able to build for Radeon Instinct to crack the market.

The good news for AMD is that they’re already partially here with ROCm, which lays the groundwork for their software stack. They now have the low-level tools such as stable programming languages and good compilers to build further libraries and frameworks off of that. The Radeon Instinct software stack, then, is all about building on top of ROCm.

The cornerstone of AMD’s efforts here (and their answer to cuDNN) is MIOpen, a high performance deep learning library for Radeon Instinct. AMD’s performance slides should be taken with a suitably large grain of salt when it comes to competitive comparisons, but they none the less hammer the point home that the company has been focused on putting together a powerful library to support their cards. The library will be responsible for providing optimized routines for basic neural network functions such as convolution, normalization, and activation functions.

Meanwhile built on top of MIOpen will be updated versions of the major deep learning frameworks, including Caffe, Torch 7, and TensorFlow. It’s these common frameworks that deep learning applications are actually built against, and as a result AMD has been lending their support to the developers of these frameworks to get MIOpen/AMD optimized paths added to them. All of this can sound a bit mundane to outsiders, but its importance cannot be overstated; it’s the low-level work that is necessary for AMD to turn the Instinct hardware into a complete ecosystem.

Alongside their direct library and framework support, when it comes to the Instinct software stack, expect to see AMD once again hammer the benefits of being open source. AMD has staked the entire ROCm platform on this philosophy, so it’s to be expected. None the less it’s an interesting point of contrast to NVIDA’s largely closed ecosystem. AMD believes that deep learning developers are looking for a more open software stack than what NVIDIA has provided – that being closed has limited developers’ ability to make full use of NVIDIA’s platform – so this will be AMD’s opportunity to put that to the test.

Instinct Servers

Finally, along with creating a full hardware and software ecosystem for the Instinct product family, AMD also has their eye on the bigger picture, going beyond individual cards and out to servers and whole racks. As a manufacturer of both GPUs and CPUs, AMD is in a rare position to be able to offer a complete hardware platform, and as a result the company is keen to take advantage of the synergy between CPU and GPU to offer something that their rivals cannot.

The basis for this effort is AMD’s upcoming Naples platform, the server platform based on Zen. Besides offering a potentially massive performance increase over AMD’s now well-outdated Bulldozer server platform, Naples lets AMD flex their muscle in heterogeneous applications, tapping into their previous experience with HSA. This is a bit more forward looking – Naples doesn’t have an official launch date yet – but AMD is optimistic about their ability to own large-scale deployments, providing both the CPU and the GPUs in large deep learning installations.

Going a bit off the beaten path here, perhaps the most interesting aspect of Naples as it intersects with Radeon Instinct comes down to PCIe lanes. All signs point to Naples offering at least 64 PCIe lanes per CPU; this is an important metric because it means there are enough lanes to give up to 4 Instinct cards a full, dedicated PCIe x16 link to the host CPU and the other cards. Intel’s Xeon platform only offers 40 PCIe lanes, which means a quad-card configuration has to either sacrifice on bandwidth or latency, trading off between a mix of x8 and x16 slots, using two Xeon CPUs, or building in a high-end PCIe switch to route together 4 x16 slots. Ultimately for installations focusing on GPU-heavy workloads, this gives AMD a distinct advantage since it means they can drive 4 Instinct cards off of a single CPU, making it a cheaper option than the aforementioned Xeon configurations.

In any case, AMD has already lined up partners to show off Naples server configurations for the Radeon Instinct. SuperMicro and Inventec are both showcasing server/rack designs for anywhere between 3 and 120 Instinct MI25 cards. The largest systems will of course involve off-system networking and more complex networking fabrics, and while AMD isn’t saying too much on the subject at this time, it’s clear that they’re being mindful of what they need to support truly massive clusters of cards.

Closing Thoughts

Wrapping things up with today’s Radeon Instinct announcement, while today’s revelations are closer to a teaser than a fully fleshed out product announcement, it’s none the less clear that AMD is about to embark on their most aggressive move in the GPU server space since their first FireStream cards almost a decade ago. Making gains in the server space has long been one of the keys to AMD’s success, both for CPUs and GPUs, and with the Radeon Instinct hardware and overarching initiative, AMD has laid out a critical plan for how to get there.

Not that any of this will come easy for AMD. Breaking back into the server market is a recurring theme for them, and their struggles there are why it’s recurring. NVIDIA is already several steps ahead of AMD in the deep learning GPU market, so AMD needs to be quick to catch up. The good news for AMD here is that unlike the broader GPU server market, the deep learning market is still young, so AMD has the opportunity to act before anyone gets too entrenched. It’s still early enough in the game that AMD believes that if they can flip just a few large customers – the Googles and Facebooks of the world – that they can make up for lost time and capture a significant chunk of the deep learning market.

With that said, as the Radeon Instinct products are not set to ship until H1 of 2017, a lot can change, both inside and outside of AMD. The company has laid down what looks to be a solid plan, but now they need to show that they can follow-through on it, executing on both hardware and software on schedule, and handling the inevitable curveball. If they can do that, then the deep learning market may very well be that server GPU success that the company has spent much of the past decade looking for.

Radeon Instinct Hardware: Polaris, Fiji, Vega
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  • The_Assimilator - Monday, December 12, 2016 - link

    *AMD recycling products intensifies*

    Well, I guess they gotta do something with all those Fiji chips they produced and nobody wanted.
  • JoeyJoJo123 - Monday, December 12, 2016 - link

    To be fair, it's Fiji with HBM on the die, so it does at least that which the Polaris chips don't.
  • MLSCrow - Monday, December 12, 2016 - link

    Actually, lots of people wanted it, but it was a little too pricey. Side from that Google just bought a bunch of these actually and Alibaba may have done the same, even prior to this announcement.
  • Demiurge - Monday, December 12, 2016 - link

    Nvidia does the same thing with Kepler cards and previously Fermi when Kepler was the norm... Also, I would encourage you to try a GTX 710 or 730 if you think AMD recycling is bad.
  • evilspoons - Tuesday, December 13, 2016 - link

    I bought a half-height GT 730 when the GK208 version launched, but telling it apart from the GF108 version was idiotic. I can't believe they didn't call it a GT 735 or something. I had to read the core configuration on the side of the box, the clock speeds, and so on to avoid buying the Fermi part (I wanted the Kepler video decoder for my home theatre PC). Bleargh.
  • jjj - Monday, December 12, 2016 - link

    "Naples doesn’t have an official launch date"

    Zen server is Q2.
  • doggface - Monday, December 12, 2016 - link

    Oh nelly. Vega looks to be very interesting...
  • ddriver - Monday, December 12, 2016 - link

    It looks like it won't be setting any efficiency records though. Adding the interconnect to maximize FP16 throughput guts efficiency as expected.

    The result is that for FP32 for Fiji we have 8.2 tflops in 175W budget at 28nm and for Vega 12.5 tflops in 300W budget at 14nm.

    In other words, process is scaled down twice, TDP budget is increased almost twice, but performance gains are only 66% or so. That's fairly modest. I'd expect even if not mature yet, process alone outta result in a 40% boost at the very least, and the expanded TDP headroom another 50%, so close to 90% at the very least. But that's just the cost of maximizing FP16 throughput, for their own sake I hope this instinct will be a different chip overall rather than just re-branding, cuz that would mean the workstation and compute workflows will needlessly suffer for the sake of a feature that is irrelevant in those fields.
  • Drumsticks - Monday, December 12, 2016 - link

    It's not too bad, I think. The P100 offers 18.7 TF of half precision performance at about 250W, so AMD in theory is ahead of Nvidia on the efficiency curve here, offering around 35% more FLOPs for 20% more power. Now, AMD TF != Nvidia TF, especially in gaming, but there's probably a chance to expect that AMD could achieve better hardware efficiency in a compute environment than in a gaming one.
  • Yojimbo - Monday, December 12, 2016 - link

    I don't think it's correct to compare the efficiency of the MI25 with the P100. Rather it should be compared efficiency-wise with the P40, as strong FP64 is not something that's been mentioned for the MI25 as far as I see.. Note that the P40 uses GDDR5 and not HBM2, which reduces its efficiency. I know the P40 doesn't have FP16 support but I don't think the MI25 will really be competing much with the Pascal generation of Tesla cards except after they are offered at a lower price once the Volta generation of cards are available. These Radeon cards are not just drop-in replacements for NVIDIA's hardware. Even assuming AMD can produce the MI25 in volume in Q2 2017, it will take a bit of testing and validation before people are willing to use it en mass in servers. Users also have to think about software and middleware considerations.

    In any case, they seem to be claiming efficiency close to the P40, which is a bit surprising. What we do know is that AMD claimed strong efficiency with Polaris before it was released and they overstated their claims. For me, I am taking their claims with a grain of salt until the product is actually released.

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