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Intel Opens Its Front-Side Bus

Posted by kdawson on Tue Apr 24, 2007 06:53 AM
from the engineers-rampant-on-a-field-azure dept.
vivin writes "The Inquirer is reporting that Intel has opened up its FSB. Intel did this during IDF 07. What this means is that you can plug non-Intel things into the Intel CPU socket. The article says 'This shows that Intel is willing to take AMD seriously as a competitive threat, and is prepared to act upon it. In addition to this breaking one of the most sacred taboos at Intel, it also hints that engineering now has the upper hand over bureaucracy.'"
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  • Not the first time (Score:5, Interesting)

    by LiquidCoooled (634315) on Tuesday April 24 2007, @06:55AM (#18852915) Homepage Journal
    This isn't the first time socket sharing has occured

    The old Socket 7 [wikipedia.org] used to fit Intel and AMD and Cyrix.
    Hell, it can even house socket 5 cpus!

    Back then it wasn't a big deal to upgrade a CPU.

    All the companies started changing sockets at a frantic pace and made a simple CPU update essentially mean a whole machine.

    A new motherboard for the new socket but it also has new memory footprint as well so that gets replaced, and the PCIx slot won't fit my agp card.
    • It's actually still one of the things that's keeping me from upgrading.

      I'd like more memory, but that would mean a new motherboard (it currently has all the memory installed it can take). Since I don't want to upgrade my CPU yet, it means buying a motherboard that won't let me upgrade my CPU if I want to in a few years.
    • by dsginter (104154) on Tuesday April 24 2007, @07:22AM (#18853175)
      This isn't the first time socket sharing has occured

      IIRC, the socket-7 issue was not that Intel *wanted* others to use the technology, but rather that their license agreements with various other manufacturers allowed the rest of the industry to use it.

      The only reason that Intel is opening up their FSB this time around is because they will be forced to use HyperTransport [zdnet.com] if they *don't* open it up (a royalty-free deal, to boot).

      Their already using AMD64 and with AMD's new processors showing promise, Intel are really scratching and clawing here. I don't have the knowledge to pick a bus based on merit but, from what I've read, Hypertransport is better. Can anyone with experience here chime in?

      Do we want Hypertransport or Intel's bus? What about licensing?
      • by julesh (229690) on Tuesday April 24 2007, @09:40AM (#18854999)
        I don't have the knowledge to pick a bus based on merit but, from what I've read, Hypertransport is better. Can anyone with experience here chime in?

        Do we want Hypertransport or Intel's bus? What about licensing?


        HT can run with approximately twice the number of transfers per second per pin as current-generation Intel FSBs. HT is also more readily expandible to use more pins, because it's an autonegotiating variable-width bus, similar to PCI-express. It also wastes fewer pins on control signals. HT is clearly the best, technologically.

        Licensing wise, HT is licensed "royalty-free" for an annual fee. I don't believe the fee is particularly large. Many chip producers have already licensed it and will license modules to connect your own chip design to it for very small fees. Such modules exist on some modern FPGAs. This is not currently true of the Intel FSB spec.
      • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

        I don't think Intel would be forced to use HyperTransport. They are easily big enough that they can make their own point-to-point interconnect and not worry about the rest of the industry. Intel is or was working one, I think it was supposed to be introduced with the Penryn chips.

        I really don't think it would necessarily be heads-and-shoulders better than Hypertransport though.
          • Re: (Score:3, Funny)

            That is the date that I am seeing when clicking on the link
            That's because you didn't take DST into account.
    • I can't see AMD benefiting much from this. Their processors are too different electrically. AMD has an integrated memory controller on the processor, and Intel puts that in the chipset. AMD would have to completely start from scratch with a new CPU to make anything of this. I'm not saying they won't try but it would just stretch their resources much thinner.
      • Intel is finally getting an on-chip memory controller with Nehalem [tgdaily.com]. Nehalem will succeed the Core 2 chip family towards the end of 2008. Nehalem follows the Penrym 45nm shrink under Intel's new achitecture->die shrink->new architecture cycle.
    • This has actually changed a bit. Core 2 runs on the same LGA775 socket as the late model Pentium 4/D. AMD's AM2+ and AM3 chips will run in the AM2 socket, but you miss out on the new features in the newer sockets: better power management in AM2+, DDR3 memory in AM3 (AM3 processors have both DDR2 and DDR3 controllers integrated).
  • by pzs (857406) on Tuesday April 24 2007, @06:59AM (#18852949)
    I hope so. Every time I have to upgrade my machine I have to spend an hour on the web working out the 700 different kinds of processor I can buy and what type of socket I need to support them.

    I had an AMD Duron 800MHz that I tried to replace with an Athlon 1300MHz which should have been supported, but created a nifty column of smoke when I plugged it in. Anything that reduces that likelihood is good in my book.

    Peter
    • I too ran into this problem. Bought a new motherboard which should have been compatible with all of my existing parts, but when I got the motherboard it would not boot. Come to find in the 80 page manual written in poor English a tiny line about "Revision A of Willamette chips will not work on this motherboard." No reason listed, and not found anywhere in any of the reviews or forums I looked at.
  • by BenJeremy (181303) on Tuesday April 24 2007, @07:06AM (#18853025)
    >> 'This shows that Intel is willing to take AMD seriously as a competitive threat, and is prepared to act upon it.'

    I'm not sure how much sense this statement really makes. If they take AMD as a serious threat, wouldn't they WANT AMD to be forced to continue using their own bus? AM2 was probably a misstep, given the performance drops, giving intel the upper hand, but now they are willing to let AMD play in their sandbox - it helps AMD more than it hurts them.

    I'm not complaining about the move, I just found the article a bit sparse on details and the statement at odds with common sense. Is it fully open, or does it require licensing? What is AMD's take on this news? How much re-work will be required to move AMD's processor cores to the intel bus? Will they gain performance or lose it in the translation?

    Lots of questions that the Inquirer seems to totally ignore in what may be a significant development in the battle of the big boys.
    • Lots of questions that the Inquirer seems to totally ignore in what may be a significant development in the battle of the big boys.
      Yes, like how long will it take before the AMD chips 'just seem to not perform as well as the Intel chips?' on the Intel FSB.
    • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

      If Intel had a chipset that both AMD and Intel could use, and AMD used it, they would gain a great deal. Like selling more chipsets to motherboard manufacturers and getting a piece of even AMD systems, dictating the future of the bus, memory, and form factors. Plus, even if there wasn't an actual performance benefit (and there probably would be since Intel would have made the design, and have that intelligence in-house), they could easily give the impression that running Intel chips on Intel hardware was
    • by Visaris (553352) on Tuesday April 24 2007, @07:39AM (#18853317) Journal
      I'm not complaining about the move, I just found the article a bit sparse on details and the statement at odds with common sense. Is it fully open, or does it require licensing? What is AMD's take on this news? How much re-work will be required to move AMD's processor cores to the intel bus? Will they gain performance or lose it in the translation?

      Intel is not trying to open their bus up to AMD. That is not at all the goal. First of all, access to the the Intel bus requires a license. I'm not sure Intel would even grand AMD one for a sane price. Second of all, AMD would in no way want Intel's bus. As has been the hot topic of discussion for over a year, AMD's HT (HyperTransport) point-2-point links are faster both in terms of bandwidth, and latency than Intel's FSB. HT uses less pins than Intel's bus, and HT devices are simpler, cost less, and use less power. HT is a pretty neat and effective technology. Intel's FSB on the other hand, is much the same as it was around 10 years ago. To answer your question, AMD would take a massive hit by going to Intel's POS bus. It's funny, ATM, AMD has the better bus/platform and Intel has the better core. No one here seems to realize that AMD would never be willing to throw out their main advantage right now... AM2 isn't the issue. The issue is HT. Hell, even IBM announced that Power7 will use AMD's HT links. No one will be dropping HT for the POSFSB any time soon.

      Intel/AMD are only opening their sockets/buses in an attempt to get third party developers to make FPGAs, JAVAics, and other accelerators. AMD has had some luck with this, and one can buy co-processors that drop into an AMD socket today. Intel is trying to get the same benifits, but I don't really see the point until Intel can get CSI working and drop the antiquated FSB.
    • Re: (Score:3, Informative)

      AM2 was probably a misstep, given the performance drops, giving intel the upper hand,

      That's just wrong. AM2 was simply AMD switching to DDR2 RAM. It didn't cause a performance drop, just no immediate performance improvement over socket 939 with DDR, and there's nothing they could have done to change that, except trying to force manufacturers around the world to produce faster DDR RAM.

      Even with the higher latency of DDR2, AMD still has a much faster bus, and lower latency, than Intel. And even if the oppo

  • by jack455 (748443) on Tuesday April 24 2007, @07:07AM (#18853039)
    Back in the late 80's or early 90's couldn't you swap out processor's? I admit I didn't know much back then but I thought that was how AMD and Cyrix got started, on boards meant for Intel CPU's.

    And by CPU, I DON'T mean the case and everything inside :)

    • And by CPU, I DON'T mean the case and everything inside :)


      Yea, that'd be the "modem".
      • No, that's the "hard drive".

        • "Hard drive" was the common one back when I was doing tech work as a student in college.

          It was kinda amusing one day we were sitting in the office and some professor comes in frantic that "Somebody stole my hard drive!!!?!?!?!".

          We were all sitting there thinking "What person is gonna take the time and effort to open up the machine and take the hard drive? This guy must have secret flux capacitor plans on there or something.". We get to his office and the whole computer is gone . . .
    • In those days, Intel's sales reps would hand out free technical reference manuals that had the complete specs to the CPU bus interface.

      You could get fun add-ons like the Weitek 3167, which was a floating-point coprocessor for the 386 that was several times faster than Intel's 80387.

    • with the socket5/6/7 boards you could use any compatible processor. I routinely had MI and MII cores in my Socket [Super] 7 motherboards. I switched to K6-2 by the end before I got my first Athlon.

      Tom
      • Re: (Score:3, Informative)

        Older AMD processors I have include the following:

        chip speed (bus speed @ multiplier)
        386dx 40 (40 @ 1x)
        486dx 50 (50 @ 1x)
        486dx2 66 (33 @ 2x)
        486dx2 80 (40 @ 2x)
        486dx4 100 (25 @ 4x, 33.3 @ 3x, even 50 @ 2x with proper cooling)
        486dx4 120 (40 @ 3x)

        I used to have this one but sold it:
        k6-2 350 (100Mhz @ 3.5x)

        AMD had more chips than this, including the k5, k6, and k6-3. I never owned any of those, so I don't remember the specs off the top of my head. After the k6-2 and k6-3 came the Socket A and Slot A Ath
  • by dfenstrate (202098) <dfenstrate@NOspAM.gmail.com> on Tuesday April 24 2007, @07:15AM (#18853107)
    I've bought Intel motherboards (and of course processors) for my last three computers, and they've been pretty rock solid.

    Perhaps they think it wise to sell products that can be used even if their competitor gets a few bucks- until today didn't they effectively yield the floor for AMD motherboards to other companies?
  • by vadim_t (324782) on Tuesday April 24 2007, @07:24AM (#18853185) Homepage
    Example: Intel opens up FSB. Motherboard manufacturers tell AMD: making boards for multiple socket types is a pain and decreases profits. Why don't you make a CPU for the Intel socket instead? Intel of course will make sure to design it so that it's great for an Intel CPU and suboptimal for an AMD one.

    The other companies probably don't worry Intel much. VIA might make something, but I highly doubt they could manage to make anything that'd take any significant market from Intel, given what they've been releasing.
    • Re: (Score:3, Interesting)

      Hypertransport is an open protocol. People would rather design hardware for HT then the Intel FSB from what I can tell (given there is already one FPGA accelerator for 939-pin sockets).

      But that raises the same point. The open socket could be used for something other than a processor. Like another FPGA accelerator.

      Tom
    • Again, AMD will never switch to Intel's FSB. Intel's bus is slower, hotter, and larger (in terms of pin count). Please go google for HyperTransport and do some research. I think you'll see that HT is one of AMD's strongest technologies and Intel's FSB is one of their weakest. There it no way AMD would trow away a major advantage over their competitor, and further, there is no way AMD would allow their socket future to be controlled by a competitor. The idea is so far from reality, I don't even see why
  • by jimicus (737525) on Tuesday April 24 2007, @07:29AM (#18853223) Homepage
    Way back when, there used to be a real benefit to upgrading your 133MHz PC to 200MHz and it was easy to do so just by changing the CPU.

    TBH, these days, for general desktop use I don't think that benefit's there any more. If you want to see a real benefit, you're best off replacing the CPU with something drastically faster. This may well involve a new motherboard and possibly new memory.

    Alternatively, you upgrade the more sensible way - look at your computer needs, look to see what's causing a bottleneck currently and upgrade that. Much more cost-effective than just replacing a CPU and hoping you see a benefit.
    • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

      Way back when, there used to be a real benefit to upgrading your 133MHz PC to 200MHz and it was easy to do so just by changing the CPU.

      Quite - though as a percentage that was a significant upgrade.

      In the days when every MHz counted, we all clawed to be at the cutting edge because upgrading really made a noticeable difference (not just to games, but the speed of everyday activities). Now the effect is less noticeable except in games as a FPS increase or the ability to turn on extra effects.

      I remember a lecturer at Uni asking us if we thought that the 200MHz CPU speeds of the time would increase, citing Moore's Law and questioning whether

      • I think progress goes slightly faster in your universe than in our.
      • by julesh (229690) on Tuesday April 24 2007, @10:04AM (#18855341)
        Give it ten years and what will we have? 256-core processors running with core clock speeds of 100GHz?

        100GHz is probably pushing it. You'll note that we haven't seen a huge increase in clock speeds recently, but rather continuing increases in instructions per cycle. I'd guess we'll reach a plateau somewhere around the 10GHz mark.

        Moore's Law will soon hit a much more fundamental law: physics. You can't keep shrinking transistors like they are at the moment; it was predicted that we'd reach the limit years ago (yes, I too remember the advent of 200MHz desktop processors, and thinking they couldn't get much faster), but the fact we haven't so far doesn't mean we won't. Moore's Law demands a shrinking by a factor of 1.4 every 18 months. We're currently on 45nm. This gives us the following trend:

        end 2008 - 32nm
        start 2010 - 22nm
        end 2011 - 16nm
        start 2013 - 12nm
        end 2014 - 8nm
        start 2016 - 6nm
        end 2017 - 4nm

        4 nanometres is only 38 atomic radii of silicon. It seems unlikely that a transistor this small could be produced. Therefore, as long as we continue to use silicon transistors (and no promising alternative that solves this issue exists right now) we will see the end of Moore's Law within the next 10 years. I'm sure of it.

        And an end of Moore's Law will not only slow GHz increases, but also will slow the adoption of larger numbers of cores, because without shrinking transistors the only way to increase number of cores is by having a larger die size, which is more expensive and requires larger chip size, which requires larger system board size, which requires larger case size, which consumers don't like.
    • That depended on whether your motherboard had the jumpers to set CPU multiplier, voltage, and FSB speed. Kind of like today, but it now depends on what your chipset and BIOS can handle.

      Ah, the bad old days.
      • Also get decent peripherals. I doubt many people reading Slashdot do it, but you might be able to influence others not to buy crap like USB ADSL "modems", cheap inkjets with expensive cartridges and weird drivers, etc., to attach to their PC with a fast expensive processor and not quite enough RAM.

        Of course people like that do need a fast PC and lots of RAM, to keep up with all the malware they will be running.
  • FPGAs, anyone? (Score:3, Interesting)

    by labreuer (950633) on Tuesday April 24 2007, @08:09AM (#18853683) Homepage
    This opening of the front side bus also means that you'll be able to plug FPGAs into it [embedded.com], which could be very cool. One way to solve the gigahertz slowdown is to specialize hardware: think co-processor that can be reconfigured in seconds to fit the particular task at hand, like video encoding.
  • by straponego (521991) on Tuesday April 24 2007, @08:35AM (#18854037)
    ...is not that AMD wants to be on Intel motherboards, though perhaps they wouldn't mind that. It's that AMD has already opened THEIR bus and sockets to non-AMD devices. The idea is that people will come up with specialized CPUs or FPGAs for tasks at which they can cream general purpose CPUs. Encryption, HPC, etc. It's a good idea, it's going to happen, but it might not matter much to the average user, at least at first.

    And yes, the bus speed matters. I've seen neural net tests in which Woodcrest, for example, does much better at 1333MHz using four cores than you'd see at 1066MHz. That's the same architecture except for bus speed. AMD's memory bandwidth is still better, though they lag in other areas.

    I don't know whether, or how much, you'll see that bus bandwidth matter in the typical slashdotter workload (games).

  • by suv4x4 (956391) on Tuesday April 24 2007, @08:49AM (#18854277)
    "This shows that Intel is willing to take AMD seriously as a competitive threat, and is prepared to act upon it. In addition to this breaking one of the most sacred taboos at Intel, it also hints that engineering now has the upper hand over bureaucracy."

    When they have to spell it out for you what their actions supposedly "hint" at, you know you're reading quite a silly PR spin on the matter.
  • So now that Intel's flagship is head and shoulders ahead of what AMD is making, now they're going to be swell guys and open up their FSB specification?

    Some encouragement of competition. "We'll complete as long as we're winning."

    I wonder if other companies will decide to get into the desktop CPU markets and use this as a starting point.
    • by Bwian_of_Nazareth (827437) on Tuesday April 24 2007, @07:05AM (#18853023) Homepage
      There are no AMD chips that you could plug into it. It is not that Intel created a socket/bus that can take AMD chips. The news is that they opened it so that their competitors can develop chips for their socket/bus if they would desire to do so. So in the future we may see AMD chips that will fit into Intel FSB, but I doubt that will happen in the near future.
      • Or maybe just a "genderbender" socket replacement type thing - put a new socket in your existing mobo socket, put a CPU in the new socket.
    • I can't see why would AMD want to use Intel's FSB when they have their own. Just for sake of users who can't switch CPUs in their motherboards as they wish? There are as many pros as cons in this situation - user can switch from Intel to AMD but she can also switch the other way around. I'm not familiar with this market and tech involved but it doesn't really sound like a big "WOW" for me.

      But it sure is good. It may encourage others to make CPUs without the need to develop their own chipsets, FSBs, motherb

    • I know this is only speaking for right now, but the motherboard and available chipsets aren't exactly AMD's weak suit. As it currently stands, at every level but the highest, the AM2's available motherboard chipsets and prices blow away the 775 Intel equivalents. If anything, I'd like to get a Core 2 Duo running on the AM2 than get an X2 running on a 775.
      • Re:wow (Score:5, Insightful)

        by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday April 24 2007, @07:32AM (#18853261)

        so why would anybody want to plug in an AMD processor there unless it was hugely cheaper or more powerful?

        For starters, intel's frontside bus is just that, a good old-fashioned FSB that hasn't changed much in years.

        AMD's processors have something completely different. Not only is it physically incompatible, it's actually "Hypertransport" which is marketing speak for a chip-to-chip interconnect [wikipedia.org]. Look at all the big iron manufacturers supporting it. Note no intel. AMD has been shipping these processors since 2003. Intel's (incompatible) equivalent isn't due out until 2008. Other manufacturers have been shipping CPUs with similar interconnects since the mid 1990s (UltraSPARC, MIPS).

        AMD processors implement NUMA [wikipedia.org] via this interconnect. Each CPU can have its own local memory. On an intel system, all processors compete for bandwidth over the shared FSB

        This is why Opteron/Athlon 64 systems scale well past 2 processors. This is also why it will be easier to make e.g. graphics processors that fit in AMD motherboards.

        intel processors may currently do better on selected synthetic benchmarks and niche applications. AMD, however, has a far more sophisticated, modern and scalable platform. Intel set sail on the itanic.

        • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

          intel processors may currently do better on selected synthetic benchmarks and niche applications.

          This looks like an AMD fanboy if I ever saw one.

    • Re: (Score:2, Interesting)

      Win98se was a decent OS despite the vulnerabilities, it was the last Windows release i actually enjoyed using & tweaking, i have since started using Linux exclusively and don't even have windows installed on my PCs, i bet if Win98se was opened sourced it could be made to accept more RAM than 512 & run on faster CPUs/FSBs/ & etc...

      Open98

      this is was coolest tool to strip down Win98 with, WARNING: applications that depend on internet explorer will break! http://snoopy81.ifrance.com/rom2.htm [ifrance.com]
      • If you like tweaking you can get more than 512 RAM on Win98 already. However, I suspect that if Windows 98 was ever GPLed, the Linux community would take one look at it, then proceed to gouge their eyes out.