Country for PR: United States
Contributor: PR Newswire New York
Friday, April 15 2022 - 04:51
AsiaNet
Open Compute Project Foundation Announces a New Hardware-Software Co-design Strategy.
AUSTIN, Texas, April 15, 2022 /PRNewswire-AsiaNet/ --

--Hardware-aware software drives maximum hardware performance, speeds 
time-to-market and an improved ecological footprint.

Today, the OCP Foundation, the nonprofit organization bringing hyperscale 
innovations to all, announced a new hardware-software co-design strategy ( 
https://c212.net/c/link/?t=0&l=en&o=3505917-1&h=209548490&u=https%3A%2F%2F146a55aca6f00848c565-a7635525d40ac1c70300198708936b4e.ssl.cf1.rackcdn.com%2Fimages%2Fe1616cbcf1f761b6e6f351cff7296613227bb599.pdf&a=hardware-software+co-design+strategy 
) that is exemplified by recent contributions to the OCP by Microsoft and Intel 
of the Scalable I/O (Input/Output) Virtualization (SIOV) specification, and a 
new collaboration with the SONiC Project now at the Linux Foundation.

Photo - 
https://mma.prnewswire.com/media/1797406/OCP_hardware_sofware_co_design_infographic_v1_2a.jpg 


"Hardware--software co-design focuses on software that requires intimate 
knowledge of the hardware to drive maximum hardware performance, and speed 
time-to-market for hardware where system performance and ecological footprint 
can be highly dependent on software and hardware interactions. As part of the 
OCP's new hardware--software co-design strategy we are pleased to have new 
contributions from Microsoft and Intel and continue our collaboration with the 
SONiC Project at the Linux Foundation," said George Tchaparian, CEO Open 
Compute Project Foundation.

Hardware-software co-design takes on new importance as software workloads 
become more diverse requiring specialized silicon to deliver top performance at 
an acceptable energy and ecological cost. System software, or firmware, will 
need to be designed using knowledge of the underlying hardware architecture to 
make appropriate engineering trade-offs along the cost vs performance curve 
enabling greener software.

The recent contribution of Microsoft and Intel of the Scalable I/O 
Virtualization ( 
https://c212.net/c/link/?t=0&l=en&o=3505917-1&h=3080198232&u=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.opencompute.org%2Fdocuments%2Focp-scalable-io-virtualization-technical-specification-revision-1-v1-2-pdf&a=Scalable+I%2FO+Virtualization 
) specification is an important example of OCP's hardware-software co-design 
strategy where SIOV provides a hardware and software architecture for 
mass-scale virtualization of I/O. This specification is an evolution of SR-IOV 
(single root input output virtualization) removing scaling limitations, 
enabling 100's and 1,000's of VMs (virtual machines) or software containers to 
dynamically share a pool of I/O devices meeting the requirements of today's 
modern cloud native software. The OCP intends to grow a healthy community 
around SIOV becoming a catalyst to spark innovation in silicon and cloud 
architectures.

Collaboration between the OCP and the Linux Foundation expands to include the 
SONiC Project. In alignment with hardware-software co-design, collaboration 
continues around the Switch Abstraction Interface (SAI) ( 
https://www.opencompute.org/documents/switch-abstraction-interface-ocp-specification-v0-2-pdf 
) project remaining at OCP and SONiC now at the Linux Foundation. The OCP is 
pleased that this collaboration allows the OCP to benefit from larger 
acceptance of SONiC by the Linux Foundation software development community, 
creating pull for OCP recognized switch hardware, opening new market verticals 
for OCP recognized equipment.  While SONiC is the OS of choice for many 
hyperscale data center operators, other market segments need specialized 
features and SAI will enable the market to choose the switch OS best suited to 
its use cases.

"The market for Data Center Infrastructure continues to evolve with increased 
silicon diversity prompted by adoption of AI and ML workloads. This diversity 
is reshaping the market which is under pressure to deliver the high-performance 
computational infrastructure that also manages its power and ecological 
footprint. These combinations of requirements make hardware-software co-design 
an imperative." said Ashish Nadkarni, Group Vice President, Infrastructure 
Systems, Worldwide Infrastructure at IDC.

Support from Key Stakeholders

Intel (SIOV)
"Intel is committed to open standards as the fuel that that powers inclusive, 
innovative ecosystems," said Ronak Singhal, Senior Fellow and Chief Architect 
for Intel Xeon Roadmap & Technology at Intel.  "By partnering with Open Compute 
Project to host the new Scalable I/O Virtualization (SIOV) specification, the 
whole CPU and PCIe device ecosystem can accelerate adoption of more scalable, 
efficient and high-performance I/O virtualization for the hyperscale era."

Microsoft (SONiC)
"The open source SONiC Network Operating System is enabling rapid innovation 
across the network ecosystem, and it began with the definition of the Switch 
Abstraction Interface (SAI) at OCP.  OCP and SONiC have contributed 
tremendously to each other's growth in the last several years.  SONiC is now 
joining the Linux Foundation to expand the communities and industries it 
serves.  The OCP & LF SONiC Foundation will continue to work closely together 
across hardware and SAI specifications as part of the OCP's hardware-software 
co-design strategy," said Dave Maltz, SONiC Foundation Board Member and 
Technical Fellow/CVP, Microsoft.

Linux Foundation 
"The Linux Foundation is happy to welcome SONiC, a leader in open source data 
center NOS deployments, to our growing community of open networking projects 
and developer communities," said Arpit Joshipura, general manager, Networking, 
Edge, and IoT, the Linux Foundation. "As we focus on the software component of 
SONiC, we look forward to partnering with the Open Compute Foundation (OCP) on 
aligning hardware and specifications such as SAI."

About the Open Compute Project Foundation
At the core of the open compute project (OCP) is its community of hyperscale 
data center operators, joined by telecom and colocation providers and 
enterprise IT users, working with vendors to develop open innovations that when 
embedded in product are deployed from the cloud to the edge. The OCP Foundation 
is responsible for fostering and serving the OCP community to meet the market 
and shape the future, taking hyperscale led innovations to everyone. Meeting 
the market is accomplished through open designs and best practices, and with 
data center facility and IT equipment embedding OCP community developed 
innovations for efficiency, at-scale operations, and sustainability.  Shaping 
the future includes investing in strategic initiatives that prepares the IT 
ecosystem for major changes, such as AI & ML, optics, advanced cooling 
techniques, and composable silicon.  Learn more at www.opencompute.org.

Media Contact
Dirk Van Slyke
Open Compute Project Foundation
Vice President, Chief Marketing Officer
dirkv@opencompute.org 
Mobile: +1 303-999-7398
(Central Time Zone/CST/Houston, TX)

SOURCE: Open Compute Project Foundation
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