POWER9

POWER9
Technician holding a POWER9 processor
General information
Launched2017
Designed byIBM
Common manufacturer
Performance
Max. CPU clock rate4 GHz[1]
Cache
L1 cache32+32 KiB per core[1]
L2 cache512 KiB per core[1]
L3 cache120 MiB per chip[1]
L4 cachevia Centaur[1]
Architecture and classification
Technology node14 nm (FinFET)
Instruction setPower ISA (Power ISA v.3.0)
Physical specifications
Cores
  • 12 SMT8 cores or 24 SMT4 cores on die[2][3][4]
History
PredecessorPOWER8
SuccessorPower10

POWER9 is a family of superscalar, multithreading, multi-core microprocessors produced by IBM, based on the Power ISA. It was announced in August 2016.[2] The POWER9-based processors are being manufactured using a 14 nm FinFET process,[3] in 12- and 24-core versions, for scale out and scale up applications,[3] and possibly other variations, since the POWER9 architecture is open for licensing and modification by the OpenPOWER Foundation members.[5]

Summit, the ninth fastest supercomputer in the world (based on the Top500 list as of June 2024[6]), is based on POWER9, while also using Nvidia Tesla GPUs as accelerators.[7]

  1. ^ a b c d e Cite error: The named reference nextplatform-p9 was invoked but never defined (see the help page).
  2. ^ a b Shah, Agam (2016-08-23). "IBM's 24-core Power9 chip: 5 things you need to know". PCWorld.
  3. ^ a b c McCredie, Brad (April 2016). "OpenPOWER and the Roadmap Ahead" (presentation). OpenPOWER Foundation.
  4. ^ Morgan, Timothy Prickett (2017-12-05). "Power9 To The People". The Next Platform. the Nimbus Power9 chip used in the AC922 is a single chip module that has 24 cores on the die. The Summit and Sierra machines based on the AC922 are getting 22 core versions of the chips ... IBM could later, as Power9 yields improve, add a 24 core option.
  5. ^ Williams, Chris (2016-04-07). "Power9: Google gives Intel a chip-flip migraine, IBM tries to lures big biz". The Register.
  6. ^ "The 63rd edition of the TOP500 List (June 2024)".
  7. ^ "ORNL Launches Summit Supercomputer | ORNL". 8 June 2018.