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rlarino

11/7/2012 9:36 PM EST

Does anyone happen to know where I might be able to find this paper that was ...

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Dave.Clare

10/16/2012 12:53 PM EDT

We too saw some very innovative software from Russian coders in the 1990's and ...

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ARM gets weapon in server battle vs. Intel

Rick Merritt

10/2/2012 12:51 PM EDT


SAN JOSE, Calif. – Russian engineers are developing software to run x86 programs on ARM-based servers. If successful, the software could help lower one of the biggest barriers ARM SoC makers face getting their chips adopted as alternatives to Intel x86 processors that dominate today’s server market.

Elbrus Technologies has developed emulation software that currently delivers 40 percent of native ARM performance. The company believes it could reach 80 percent native ARM performance or greater by the end of 2014. Analysts and ARM execs described the code as a significant, but limited option.

[Get a 10% discount on ARM TechCon 2012 conference passes by using promo code EDIT. Click here to learn about the show and register.]

A growing list of companies—including Applied Micro, Calxeda, Cavium, Marvell, Nvidia and Samsung—aim to replace Intel CPUs with ARM SoCs that pack more functions and consume less power. One of their biggest hurdles is their chips do not support the wealth of server software that runs on the x86.

The  emulation code from Elbrus Tech could help lower that barrier. The team will present a paper on its work at the ARM TechCon in Santa Clara, Calif., Oct. 30-Nov. 1.

The team’s software uses 1 Mbyte of memory. “What is more exciting is the fact that the memory footprint will have weak dependence on the number of applications that are being run in emulation mode,” Anatoly Konukhov, a member of the Elbrus Tech team, said in an e-mail exchange.

The team has developed a binary translator that acts as an emulator, and plans to create an optimization process for it.

"Currently, we are creating a binary translator which allows us to run applications," Konukhov said. "Implementation of an optimization process will start in parallel later this year--we're expecting both parts be ready in the end of 2014."

"The major concern for us is lack of software developers with binary translation expertise," he added. "This is also the reason for us to estimate project release in late 2014."

The Elbrus Tech software uses a parallel compilation process and stores translations in volatile memory to decrease overhead when starting up. The binary translator will have "several levels of optimization for 'cold' and 'hot' regions of code," said Konukhov.

Work on the software started in 2010. Last summer, Elbrus Tech got $1.3 million in funding from the Russian investment fund Skolkovo and MCST, a veteran Russian processor and software developer. MCST also is providing developers for the project.


Related stories:


AMCC Shows the Way for ARM Servers


Marvell quad-core ARM targets x86 servers






nicolas.mokhoff

10/2/2012 3:03 PM EDT

When I visited the Elbrus Laboratories in the early 1990s I was shown big iron Russian supercompters made out of 1970s and 80s vintage technologies. I was told that we built these out of necessity from vacuum tubes, and "they work". Russian/Soviet science and technology has come a long way, and has ways to go. It's gratifying that Elbrus is tackling ARM software and is presenting at the SV venue.

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Ratgebber

10/3/2012 1:35 PM EDT

On the other hand, at a cutting edge supercomputer research lab in the US, we were given by a team from Moscow state University a floppy disk which you would stick into your 286 and it could derive Feynman diagrams to tree level from a Lagrangian. Yeah early 1990s it was...

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Dave.Clare

10/16/2012 12:53 PM EDT

We too saw some very innovative software from Russian coders in the 1990's and even in the 80's on the BBC Micro.

The Acorn Risc Machine (ARM) computer of the mid 80's onwards had many emulators including x86/Microsoft emulations and they worked wellenough for many companies to run legacy software on. You can still pick these up on ebay for very little money (go for the RiscPC with latest version of RISC OS) I am sure they would surprise a few people - no they would surprise a lot of people. Especially given that everything was developed on a shoe string. Spend a few hundred pounds on a trip back in time and think where things could be now if Acorn had got the right investment!

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xorbit

10/3/2012 11:23 AM EDT

I think the need for x86 compatibility is overblown and rapidly diminishing. Only legacy closed source applications have a need for such binary compatibility. Cloud infrastructure runs largely on open source technologies such as Linux and couldn't care less whether the instruction set is x86 or ARM. Moving an application from x86 to ARM is usually only a "make" away.

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I_B_GREEN

10/4/2012 10:23 AM EDT

You are right in a way but completely wrong in another. it is a chicken and egg problem. No software no sales.
Provide x86 support at = or better performance/watt and its off to the races.

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I_B_GREEN

10/4/2012 10:25 AM EDT

What is the power consumption running X86?
at 40 utilization what is the power usage?
If it does not scale down then not significant until approuching 80%. That is why they mentioned 80% by 2014.

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I_B_GREEN

10/4/2012 10:25 AM EDT

If they hit parity with x86 hardware in performance/watt then a game changer.

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mfaucher

10/3/2012 11:27 AM EDT

"Make" is not the issue... it's all the testing, qualification, etc of the stack

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xorbit

10/3/2012 4:47 PM EDT

Same applies to their translation layer. Only, you likely won't get the source for it to help you.

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lymatthew

10/3/2012 11:55 AM EDT

Why haven't they been bought by Intel yet?

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przemek

10/3/2012 12:02 PM EDT

I just don't understand how an x86 emulation on ARM can help. ARM lags in performance, but makes it up in its market segment by superior power efficiency. Emulating x86 on such slower chips is bound to be slow-squared. The only reason to do it would be legacy applications, but the whole point of the post-PC era is that it's no longer the Wintel monopoly: backwards compatibility requirement is over.

The new software is portable---either because it's Open Source (like Android) or because it is written in Java or HTML5, or is really a light client running against a cloud-based back end.

Look at Transmeta---they couldn't make the emulation win, even though they emulated on a custom-fit microarchitecture rather than general ISA like ARM. Intel is just too good at improving their product for those that needed it.

The bottom line is, those sorry chaps who cannot move away from x86 will use Intel. Those who can port will make a decision based on cost, performance, power consideration, etc. I'll just say that I just got my $30 Raspberry running yesterday. It's slowish, but it runs off battery and did I mention that the entire computer costs $30?

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xorbit

10/3/2012 6:30 PM EDT

Same here. Dealing with Debian on my Raspberry Pi works exactly the same as it does on my quad core Intel VPS. I couldn't care less which instruction set it's running on.

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Navelpluis

10/4/2012 4:02 AM EDT

Yeah, and this is exactly the reason why THIS happens: When I run FLASH (= Adobe misery) my PC almost gets on fire, all due to the damned protocol and layer stackers out there. Why don't you software programmers not do a proper job?

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xorbit

10/4/2012 9:58 AM EDT

Whoa, what's bitten you? Flash running your PC hot has exactly NOTHING to do with this. Flash is just a piece of junk that needs to die. Even Adobe realizes this--now if only web developers did too...

Recompiling source to native code is the most efficient thing to do, and that's what I was talking about. Emulating a different instruction set in real time is not efficient.

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MikeSmith2011

10/3/2012 12:40 PM EDT

This does reduce the barrier to adoption for ARM in the server space though. I agree that the future is less sticky as far as ISA's go with most of the could applications running on higher abstracted platforms that hide the underlying h/w. But it is a compelling story to be able to say to the datacenter operators that they can run their existing software (albiet at lower performance) and all the new stuff with great power efficiency.

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Some Guy

10/3/2012 1:42 PM EDT

Not seeing the compelling anywhere. Power efficiency is a fiction if it takes more total energy to go your computation.

So it emulates at 40% of ARM, which is, in turn a percentage of x86. By the time you get done with the calculation, you have run for so much longer that the total energy (operating cost dollars) is greater than just running on x86.

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bruzzer2

10/3/2012 3:34 PM EDT

x86 emulation has been attempted in the past including on big iron DEC Alpha; always fell short on overhead.

Although can yield an interesting engineering lesson, especially in Nx486 to 586 example on
reverse engineering x86 instruction set for implementation in RISC hard wired decoder.


Mike Bruzzone
Camp Marketing

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fergie65

10/3/2012 10:21 PM EDT

Several very good comments here. As some note, in the area of cloud platforms, the software assets are owned by the data center. So this type of emulaton technology is less relevant. However if you imagine an Enterprise severl where there is a mix of apps written in a high level (and therefore relatviely easy to recompile and run natively) language and an (annoying) application where only the x86 binary is available. Here, this type of translation is useful. And the performance hit will lessen. Trust me.

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DMcCunney

10/3/2012 10:35 PM EDT

It think this is interesting but not a game changer. Emulation has been around a long time.

For instance, I still have and use a Palm OS PDA. Original Palm devices used Motorola Dragonball processors. As devices required more power, they outgrew the Dragonball, and Palm and competitors shifted to ARM devices. To avoid making the vast amount of existing Palm software incompatible, Palm implemented a hardware compatibility layer. Motorola instructions were intercepted and converted on the fly to ARM instructions. In fact, it wasn't possible to write fully native apps. You wrote and compiled to Motorola code, but you could write "ARMlets" in native code to speed up critical operations.

Granted, the ARM CPUs were a *lot* faster than the Dragonball chips they supplanted (My ARM device runs at 200mhz. The last Dragonball device ran at 33mhz), so the overhead of emulation wasn't a factor.

It will be here, but that may not be critical. It will depend on exactly what X86 apps will run under it, and I would expect the emulation to improve over current levels, so while it might not be as fast as native code, it might be fast *enough*.

And it would be a stopgap in any case: it's a fair assumption that if ARM gains traction in the server space, proprietary X86 apps will be rewritten/recompiled for ARM to sell into that space.

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Neo1

10/3/2012 11:14 PM EDT

I think this is a nice project for some research work but not so much for a startup company. I wonder what they aim to monetize by making the emulator run x86 apps. The world of internet is becoming more and more ISA and OS agnostic where the only winning combination is performance and power.

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bruzzer2

10/3/2012 11:38 PM EDT

Fergie 65; on performance will lesson under emulation; exactly. If you mean by binary that the performane hit will lesson for applications
recomplied for 'specific x86 instruction calls" exactly. Hardware substitution learning always starts addressing core instruction translation equired for target application.

Mike Bruzzone
Camp Marketing












































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rick.merritt

10/4/2012 3:05 AM EDT

FYI, Here's some analysis that was apparently cut from the current version of the story:

“It’s very possible this could be useful technology in a 2014 time frame,” said Kevin Krewell, senior analyst with market watcher Linley Group (Mountain View, Calif.).

Startup Transitive Technology helped Apple and SGI transition to the x86 from PowerPC and MIPS respectively before Transitive was acquired by IBM. Emulation “could be used for migration, but not as a long term strategy,” Krewell said.

Emulation is typically used when the new architecture has higher performance than the old one, which is not the case—at least today--moving from the x86 to ARM. “By the time this software is out in 2014 you could see chips using ARM’s V8, 64-bit architecture,” Krewell noted.

“That said, you will lose some of the power efficiency of ARM when doing emulation,” Krewell said. “Once you lose 20 or more percent of efficiency, you put ARM on par with an x86,” he added.

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rick.merritt

10/4/2012 3:06 AM EDT

BTW, ARM is quick to admit there is a wealth of 64-bit server software that still has hooks to the x86.

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Navelpluis

10/4/2012 5:59 AM EDT

You are VERY right. It is just a matter of time before a good software development team out there to kick out a layer or 3. So that server apps finally run light and on very low power.

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xorbit

10/4/2012 9:59 AM EDT

There already are light options out there, such as node.js and G-WAN.

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goafrit

10/4/2012 6:26 PM EDT

It is simply on its path. Intel will finally see a real business competitor. AMR is still small, but they have a real shot in making Intel sweat.

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Les_Slater

10/4/2012 10:59 AM EDT

The real question is: Can ARM compete with Intel in the long run? It boils down to process and economics, not instruction set. Whomever delivers the most work per Joule wins.

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goafrit

10/4/2012 6:25 PM EDT

Yes. AMR is delivering better value per joule now. If we get Intel not to bundle illegal funds as they did with Dell to suppress AMD, we have a game here.

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MikeSmith2011

10/8/2012 1:33 AM EDT

Hopefully the anti-trust rulings have put them on notice.

Otherwise their business practices are un-ethical to say the least.

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resistion

10/4/2012 11:22 AM EDT

Intel cannot invade Samsung's vertically integrated ARM space, which will only grow, I think.

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goafrit

10/4/2012 6:24 PM EDT

Yes, Intel will find it hard to attach AMR business model because of the octopus model

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goafrit

10/4/2012 6:23 PM EDT

Good luck to ARM, we need a real competitor to Intel.

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panzerboy

10/8/2012 5:24 AM EDT

I wonder how much that 40% of native performance is due to the x86 code. The ARM has more registers so does less stack shuffling to get its work done. Translated code has to pay the Intel Tax.

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rlarino

11/7/2012 9:36 PM EST

Does anyone happen to know where I might be able to find this paper that was presented last week at ARM TechCon? I am currently taking a graduate level computer architecture course and I would love to present this article to the class. Any information anyone might be able to offer would be much appreciated.

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