Nvidia projected to ship roughly a billion RISC-V cores in its products by year's end

Alfonso Maruccia

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In brief: Nvidia has been quietly using the RISC-V architecture to power numerous computing devices, and deploying a substantial number of cores to paying customers. In fact, the company is nearing a historical milestone in terms of RISC-V core deployments.

Nvidia has apparently been utilizing the RISC-V architecture for quite some time. As one of the most valued technology companies in the world, the GPU giant employs this open standard instruction set architecture (ISA) from the RISC paradigm in many of the custom, albeit "ancillary," cores embedded within its GPUs.

Nvidia's close relationship with RISC-V was highlighted at the recently held RISC-V Summit, where the company discussed how the open ISA is implemented in its chips. RISC-V-based cores have been used as specialized microcontroller units (MCUs) since 2015, replacing the company's proprietary "Falcon" MCUs.

Nvidia explained that the hardware and software for these RISC-V MCUs were developed in-house, and the number of cores continues to grow.

According to an "unofficial" estimate, the Santa Clara corporation is projected to ship around one billion RISC-V cores by the end of the year. RISC-V applications in Nvidia products encompass "function-level control" scenarios, including video codecs, display management, chip-to-chip interfaces, chip-level control tasks like power management and security, and network data processing.

Nvidia's RISC-V cores feature more than 20 custom extensions. The most significant piece of silicon based on the open ISA is likely the GPU System Processor (GSP). Some GPUs include a specialized GSP unit that offloads GPU initialization and management tasks, thereby managing computing processes traditionally handled by the system's CPU driver.

The GSP embedded in recent Nvidia GPUs offloads kernel driver functions, further reducing CPU utilization and enabling multiple remote users to share the same GPU unit in cloud environments. In addition to GPUs, Nvidia is also shipping RISC-V cores and MCUs in CPUs, System-on-Chip designs, and other products.

The RISC-V architecture began its journey in 2010 as a project at the University of California, Berkeley. Since 2019, the Swiss-based non-profit organization RISC-V International has been managing the development of the ISA. The architecture is available under a Creative Commons or BSD license, allowing anyone in the world to theoretically develop new chip designs based on it – and many are doing just that.

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Fool me, they just want to be free of ARM fees haha
After ARM has threatened Qualcomm with total destruction via legal extortion, can you blame them? ARM can just yeet your license if you anger them, that's not sustainable.

Not to mention how much more controlling ARM has gotten regarding their ISA. Remember that thing where they wanted you to pay more for chips if you made higher end devices? They also slipped in there that you had to use ARM cores and MALI GPUs. No more custom tech, no more adreno, no more tensor or xenos.

ARM are complete dicks, so of course Nvidia is gonna find a way to get away from them if possible.
 
After ARM has threatened Qualcomm with total destruction via legal extortion, can you blame them? ARM can just yeet your license if you anger them, that's not sustainable.

Not to mention how much more controlling ARM has gotten regarding their ISA. Remember that thing where they wanted you to pay more for chips if you made higher end devices? They also slipped in there that you had to use ARM cores and MALI GPUs. No more custom tech, no more adreno, no more tensor or xenos.

ARM are complete dicks, so of course Nvidia is gonna find a way to get away from them if possible.
So how does Apple get away with it? Aren't their cores essentially Arm?
 
Some GPUs include a specialized GSP unit that offloads GPU initialization and management tasks, thereby managing computing processes traditionally handled by the system's CPU driver.
That's cool. Is that reserved for the shower expensive server cards or can we expect NVIDIAs consumer cards to be as CPU friendly as AMDs or even friendlier?
As hardware unboxed has previously shown when the CPU is the bottleneck AMD outperforms NVIDIA, this sounds like they could pull an Uno Reverse there.
 
So how does Apple get away with it? Aren't their cores essentially Arm?
If you are asking in reference to the higher cost thing, ARM backed off of that after the market responded with a resounding "alright imma invest in RISC" and ARM realized they would torpedo their entire business model. Apple would have been forced to use that tech, had ARM's changes gone through, but when you piss off both the 800 and 1000 lb gorillas at the same time they can apply "pressure". Between Apple, Qualcomm, Mediatek, and Nvidia, there's enough resources to launch RISC V within a few years, if they really wanted to.

All of that was ARM trying to make more money. Somehow, they need more, despite being as profitable as they are. That's why they were shopping around for a buyer. Greed is gonna destroy them.
 
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