What’s New: Intel announced today it is working with Hewlett Packard Enterprise* (HPE) to provide increased workload acceleration capacity for the HPE ProLiant DL380 Gen10 server. This will address computing-intensive markets – like streaming analytics, media transcoding, financial technology and network security – with the new high-performance Intel® FPGA Programmable Acceleration Card (Intel® FPGA PAC) D5005. The Intel FPGA PAC D5005 is the second card in the Intel PAC Portfolio and is shipping now in the HPE ProLiant DL3809 Gen10 server.
“The HPE ProLiant Gen10 server family is the world’s most secure, manageable and agile server platform available on the market today. By integrating the Intel FPGA PAC D5005 accelerator into the HPE ProLiant DL380 Gen10 server, we are now delivering optimized configurations for an increasing number of workloads, including AI inferencing, big data and streaming analytics, network security and image transcoding. Combined with our broad portfolio of services from HPE Pointnext, we enable our customers to accelerate time-to-value and increase ROI.”
– Bill Mannel, vice president and general manager, HPC and AI, at Hewlett Packard Enterprise
Why It’s Important: Applications like streaming analytics, artificial intelligence (including speech to text) and media transcoding require large amounts of computational capability to meet today’s increasing demands. Data center customers use hardware accelerators for specific workloads that can most benefit from field programmable gate array-based (FPGA) hardware acceleration. Diverting such tasks to tailored hardware accelerators offloads suitable workloads and frees a server’s CPU cycles for higher value workloads. Offloading appropriate workloads lowers the data center operator’s total cost of ownership.
The new Intel FPGA PAC D5005 offers more logic, memory and networking capability than previous PACs. The Intel FPGA PAC D5005 is now qualified in the HPE ProLiant DL380 Gen10 server, offering customers a higher performance PAC option in addition to the already shipping Intel PAC with Intel® Arria® 10 GX FPGA.
What It Does: The Intel FPGA PAC D5005 acceleration card, which is based on an Intel® Stratix® 10 SX FPGA, provides high-performance inline and lookaside workload acceleration to servers based on Intel® Xeon™ Scalable processors using the Intel Acceleration Stack, which includes acceleration libraries and development tools.
The Details: HPE is the first server OEM to announce pre-qualification of the Intel FPGA PAC D5005 accelerator card for use with its servers, specifically the HPE ProLiant DL380 Gen10 server. Other server vendors are also qualifying the Intel FPGA PAC D5005 accelerator card. Initial workloads specifically developed for the Intel FPGA PAC D5005 accelerator card include:
- AI (speech-to-text translation) from Myrtle*
- Network security from Algo-Logic*
- Image transcoding from CTAccel*
- Video transcoding from IBEX*
The Intel FPGA PAC D5005 accelerator card is the latest in a growing line of FPGA-based server-accelerator cards from Intel. Compared with the Intel programmable acceleration card with Intel Arria 10 GX FPGA, the Intel FPGA PAC D5005 accelerator card offers significantly more resources including three times the amount of programmable logic, as much as 32 GB of DDR4 memory (a 4x increase) and faster Ethernet ports (two 100GE ports versus one 40GE port). With a smaller physical and power footprint, the Intel PAC with Intel Arria 10 GX FPGA fits a broader range of servers, while the Intel PAC D5005 is focused on providing a higher level of acceleration.
More Context: Customers can benefit now from simplified ordering, streamlined system integration and assured interoperability. To buy, visit HPE. To learn more, read the product brief.
The Small Print:
Results have been estimated or simulated using internal Intel analysis, architecture simulation, and modeling, and provided to you for informational purposes. Any differences in your system hardware, software or configuration may affect your actual performance.
Tests document performance of components on a particular test, in specific systems. Differences in hardware, software, or configuration will affect actual performance. Consult other sources of information to evaluate performance as you consider your purchase. For more complete information about performance and benchmark results, visit www.intel.com/benchmarks.
Intel does not control or audit third-party benchmark data or the websites referenced in this document. You should visit the referenced website and confirm whether referenced data are accurate.
Intel and the Intel logo, Stratix, Arria are trademarks of Intel Corporation in the United States and other countries.
About Intel
Intel (NASDAQ: INTC), a leader in the semiconductor industry, is shaping the data-centric future with computing and communications technology that is the foundation of the world’s innovations. The company’s engineering expertise is helping address the world’s greatest challenges as well as helping secure, power and connect billions of devices and the infrastructure of the smart, connected world – from the cloud to the network to the edge and everything in between. Find more information about Intel at newsroom.intel.com and intel.com.