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Intel Preps GCC Compiler For New AMX & ISA Features Ahead Of Diamond Rapids

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  • Intel Preps GCC Compiler For New AMX & ISA Features Ahead Of Diamond Rapids

    Phoronix: Intel Preps GCC Compiler For New AMX & ISA Features Ahead Of Diamond Rapids

    Intel's compiler engineers today posted a number of feature patches for the GNU Compiler Collection (GCC) for enabling new ISA features to be found with next-generation Xeon "Diamond Rapids" processors. Excitingly a number of new Advanced Matrix Extensions (AMX) features are coming with next-gen Intel Xeon...

    Phoronix, Linux Hardware Reviews, Linux hardware benchmarks, Linux server benchmarks, Linux benchmarking, Desktop Linux, Linux performance, Open Source graphics, Linux How To, Ubuntu benchmarks, Ubuntu hardware, Phoronix Test Suite

  • #2
    Even more exciting is that this confirms we have FRED for Panther Lake.

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    • #3
      RISC-V just ratified RVA23 (a huge milestone), and yet we're getting excited (?) about x86's newly added cruft for some reason.

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      • #4
        Diamond Rapids also including AVX 10.2 according to the displayed extensions.

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        • #5

          is the link to the document

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          • #6
            Originally posted by ayumu View Post
            RISC-V just ratified RVA23 (a huge milestone), and yet we're getting excited (?) about x86's newly added cruft for some reason.
            1. You're right, nobody cares.
            2. I read the big RVA-23 announcement and it's just some statements about tacking on some vector extensions and hypervisor extensions. In other words, the magic of RVA23 is to tack on "cruft" that x86 chips have supported for decades. As such, I'm vastly more excited about improvements in Panther Lake vs. paper risc-v announcements.

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            • #7
              Originally posted by ayumu View Post
              RISC-V just ratified RVA23 (a huge milestone), and yet we're getting excited (?) about x86's newly added cruft for some reason.
              RISC-V has not demonstrated anything worthwhile yet, nothing for consumers, nothing for enterprise, meanwhile x86 is still the backbone of the HPC world.

              RISC-V fanboys are really weird, probably part of the same group as Rust cultists.

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              • #8
                Originally posted by ayumu View Post
                RISC-V just ratified RVA23 (a huge milestone), and yet we're getting excited (?) about x86's newly added cruft for some reason.
                There aren't any RISC-V devices with competitive performance to leading x86 or ARM designs. I very much want RISC-V to succeed, but most people won't care until performance / cost hits a beneficial ratio.

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                • #9
                  Looks like Diamond Rapids is also getting an updated version of the APX extensions.

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