CXL Overcomes Hierarchical Routing Limits
By Gary Hilson, EETimes (January 9, 2024)
The latest incremental update to the Compute Express Link (CXL) protocol aims to improve disaggregation and keep pace with high-performance computational workloads.
The feature updates in CXL 3.1 were already in play when the standard was last updated, but members of the CXL Consortium needed a little more time to make sure they could work across different architectures and further finesse security features that were introduced in 2.0, Kurtis Bowman, the Consortium’s working group co-chair, told EE Times.
Moving to a fabric is not a small task, he added. “That took some time to get worked out.”
With hierarchical-based routing, memory devices at the bottom must go up to the host if they want to communicate with each other, even if they sit right beside each other. Bowman said port-based routing (PBR) in CXL 3.1 allows for much more efficient switching. Reducing the number of hops necessary by staying in the memory domain dramatically reduces latency, he said, and it also enables more complex topologies.
To read the full article, click here
Related Semiconductor IP
Related News
- Monterey Teams with eASIC to Provide Core-Centric Hierarchical Design Solution
- Silicon Perspective Acquisition Adds Breakthrough Hierarchical Capabilities to Cadence SOC Design Technology
- Hierarchical System-on-Chip cosimulation and emulation now available <!-- Dolphin Integration -->
- New EDA company, Plato, targets SoC routing
Latest News
- SkyWater Technology and QuamCore Announce Collaboration to Fabricate Digital Superconducting Controller for Scalable Quantum Computing
- Aion Silicon Expands Barcelona Design Center to Meet Surging Demand for ASIC and SoC Solutions
- UMC Reports Sales for October 2025
- Arm Q2 FYE26 revenue surpasses $1 billion for third consecutive quarter
- Perceptia Updates Design Kit for pPLL03 on GlobalFoundries 22FDX Platform