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Intel’s Xe-HP ‘High-Performance’ DG2 GPU Spotted – The Enthusiast & Workstation Competitor To AMD’s RDNA/CDNA & NVIDIA’s Ampere

Intel-XE-Discrete-GPU-With-Next-Gen-Graphics_2.jpg


As Intel readies its next-generation Xe GPU architecture for launch, the first references of the high-end variant known as the Xe-HP have appeared in a document published by Intel. The Intel Xe-HP GPUs would be powering all the way from enthusiast-class to workstation tier graphics cards as hinted by Intel previously.

Intel's Xe-HP 'High-Performance' GPU Referenced In Latest Open Source Documents - The Third Enthusiast & Workstation GPU Entrant
We have been hearing a lot about Intel's Xe GPUs but those are mostly the low power parts derived under the Xe-LP architecture. The Xe-HP 'High-Performance' GPUs were spotted by the tech leaker, Komachi (via HardwareLuxx), who found them hidden inside one of Intel's Open Source Platform documents retaining information about Iris Plus & UHD graphics. The updated adds a 'new systolic pipeline addition on EU (Execution Uni) from Gen 12 HP onwards' which are still early additions to the upcoming GPU architecture but it looks like Intel is now moving on from Xe-LP and is shifting gears to high-end graphics.






The specific section of the document can be seen below:
Intel-Xe-HP-Gen-12-High-End-Graphics.png


Previously released test drivers mentioned that Intel's Xe-LP architecture would power the DG1 or Discrete Graphics 1 GPUs while Xe-HP would power the DG2 or Discrete Graphics 2 GPUs. We don't know much about the DG2 tier of graphics cards except what was mentioned in the test drivers as they also mentioned what seemed to be execution units for each respective part. Following are the variants mentioned in the drivers:

  • iDG1LPDEV = "Intel(R) UHD Graphics, Gen12 LP DG1" "gfx-driver-ci-master-2624"
  • iDG2HP512 = "Intel(R) UHD Graphics, Gen12 HP DG2" "gfx-driver-ci-master-2624"
  • iDG2HP256 = "Intel(R) UHD Graphics, Gen12 HP DG2" "gfx-driver-ci-master-2624"
  • iDG2HP128 = "Intel(R) UHD Graphics, Gen12 HP DG2" "gfx-driver-ci-master-2624"
Three parts were mentioned with 128, 256 and 512 EUs (these could also be taken as bus widths but previous GPUs used this number to refer to the EU count, not bus width). Considering that DG1 with 96 EUs sits at around 2-3 TFLOPs, a 128 EU chip could end up around 4-5 TFLOPs with 256 EUs offering around 5-10 TFLOPs and 512 EUs offering around 10-15 TFLOPs of FP32 Compute output if clocks scale really well on the higher-end GPUs.


In our most recent piece, we got to some more info on what the Xe-HP GPUs would look like. It looks like Intel's GPU design would be close to NVIDIA, at least visually, with several EUs being packed inside a single Tile. It is similar to how NVIDIA arranges several SM units within a GPC (Graphics Processing Cluster). Each Title would consist of 512 EUs and each EU will have 8 cores. Once again, the design of Intel Xe-HP and Xe-LP microarchitectures would be vastly different. It is stated that 512 EUs would be a single-tile GPU and Intel plans on offering up to 4-tile GPUs but I am not sure if that makes a whole lot of sense in the consumer space but it can work in workstation segments.

Here are the actual EU counts of Intel's various MCM-based Xe HP GPUs along with estimated core counts and TFLOPs:

  • Xe HP (12.5) 1-Tile GPU: 512 EU [Est: 4096 Cores, 12.2 TFLOPs assuming 1.5GHz, 150W]
  • Xe HP (12.5) 2-Tile GPU: 1024 EUs [Est: 8192 Cores, 20.48 assuming 1.25 GHz, TFLOPs, 300W]
  • Xe HP (12.5) 4-Tile GPU: 2048 EUs [Est: 16,384 Cores, 36 TFLOPs assuming 1.1 GHz, 400W/500W]
A 4-tile GPU would be seriously impressive and that may be why Raja Koduri mentioned it as the 'Father of All GPUs' in a recent tweet.




Intel's Xe-HP GPUs may have multiple variants with different die sizes. It's also noteworthy since Intel's Ponte Vecchio GPU which is based on the Xe-HPC architecture would actually utilize an MCM design and would feature several GPU clusters within it that are surrounded by large density HBM packages.

https://cdn.wccftech.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/12/Intel-Xe-GPU_Discrete-Graphics-Card_13.png
Intel-Xe-GPU_Discrete-Graphics-Card_13-2048x1152.png


Intel will be manufacturing their Xe HPC class GPUs on the latest 7nm process node. This is also the lead 7nm product that Intel has talked about previously. Intel would make full use of their new and enhanced packaging technologies such as Forveros and EMIB interconnects to develop the next exascale GPUs. Just in terms of process optimizations, following are the few key improvements that Intel has announced for their 7nm process node over 10nm:

  • 2x density scaling vs 10nm
  • Planned intra-node optimizations
  • 4x reduction in design rules
  • EUV
  • Next-Gen Foveros & EMIB Packaging
The Ponte Vecchio GPU based on the Xe-HPC microarchitecture would scale to 1000s of EUs so it's very likely that a variation of either Xe-LP or Xe-HP would be used with a low-tier Tile configuration and then featured inside the Ponte Vecchio MCM package. All of this would bring a third entrant in the Enthusiast and Workstation GPU space which is currently made up of AMD and NVIDIA GPUs.

It looks like that Intel's Xe-HP Enthusiast and Workstation graphics cards would go up against AMD's RDNA2/CDNA2 and NVIDIA's Ampere GPUs which are expected to be announced later this year. Intel would be unveiling its Xe-LP powered stuff with Tiger Lake CPUs first and then move on to the discrete graphics cards offerings for consumer and workstation market and finally enter the exascale race by 2021.

 
So now Nvidia boys and AMD boys can gang up on the new boy instead of beating each other up.

The irony is that while we needed AMD to provide Intel cpus with some proper competition (which they have) to try and force intel to lower their prices and make bigger advancements instead of milking it...

Now everyone will be rooting for intel gpus hoping in forces Nvidia to lower their prices.
 

JimboJones

Member
It still seems like we are many years off of them actually producing something for market (gaming wise anyway)
 

THE DUCK

voted poster of the decade by bots
When I read about intel graphics, I feel like I'm in an alternate universe. I feel like one of 2 things is about to happen:

1: Nothing, these will such and nobody will care
2: They may, in a few years, offer a revolution of computing and graphical power the likes of which we don't have currently (exponentially more so that it's competitors unless they also adopt a similar form of X multiplying GPU's)
 

ZywyPL

Banned
Really curious how MCM design will plays out outside HPC, if Intel can make it work for games, that will be a huge game-changer.
 
Really curious how MCM design will plays out outside HPC, if Intel can make it work for games, that will be a huge game-changer.
To some extent you’re talking about doing CrossFire on a single package.
Game developers don’t want to spend the necessary resources to code their games specifically to work with a multi-GPU array with a minuscule install base, and that would be the same with an MCM design.
 

ZywyPL

Banned
To some extent you’re talking about doing CrossFire on a single package.
Game developers don’t want to spend the necessary resources to code their games specifically to work with a multi-GPU array with a minuscule install base, and that would be the same with an MCM design.

CF/SLI is physically what MCM is, yes, but on the software layer it is still 2/3/4 separate GPUs that need a lot of work in order to work together, with still not even close to perfect 200/300/400% scaling, whereas the whole idea behind MCM is to make those multiple dies to be recognized on the driver level as one big GPU, without the devs needing to write even a single additional word in their game code.
 
whereas the whole idea behind MCM is to make those multiple dies to be recognized on the driver level as one big GPU, without the devs needing to write even a single additional word in their game code.
Wont be easy (in the gaming world), i'm sure our first look at MCM GPU's would be a CF/SLI type (professional use)
 
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