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AMD adds RF-sampling data converters to Versal adaptive SoCs (2024)

41 points by teleforce - 16 comments
hkwerf [3 hidden]5 mins ago
They already did that with the Zynq Ultrascale+ (https://www.amd.com/en/products/adaptive-socs-and-fpgas/soc/...). I have never seen one used professionally, though, whereas the MPSoCs are everywhere, it seems.

For Ultrascale+ this may still make sense, as the space savings in embedded applications may be significant. However, I've never seen Versal to fit in that space? In my mind, Versal is useful for larger, power-hungry beasts. Once you're there, you may as well make use of the flexibility of moving all of the RF off chip and therefore being able to more carefully select devices with the required parameters.

emusan [3 hidden]5 mins ago
These are quite often used in defense and space applications where the flexibility of the DSP allows for custom waveform implementations that would otherwise require incredible CPU processing power or small batch ASICs. The versal fabric will only expand the potential use cases even further in these domains. Cost is often lower on the priority list for these as well.
hkwerf [3 hidden]5 mins ago
Yes, I have seen versal, in particular in defense and satcom. However, in just that field, I have also never seen an RFSoC.

I've seen lots of integrated RF transceivers that were tightly coupled to the FPGAs, but not shared on the same SoC.

jdewerd [3 hidden]5 mins ago
Is that because defense doesn't like them or is it because (non-wartime) defense moves on geological timescales and these are "new"?
parsimo2010 [3 hidden]5 mins ago
As compact-ish explanation: A "standard" wideband RF system in an EW or RF reconnaissance platform covers between 0-18 GHz (DC up to the Ku band), or at least as much of it as possible (and Ka/mmW becoming common on new systems); and they have challenging requirements compared to a communication system. Communication systems are simpler to design since both sides of the link cooperate and filter out a wide swath of potentially interfering signals, but a military system wants to see as many signals as possible so they can be collected or jammed. It has not been advantageous to use an integrated RFSoC in the past given the requirements. If a company were spending millions of dollars designing a complicated front end, they might as well pick a separate ADC/DAC that maximizes the performance they cared about, rather than go with the "easy" integrated RFSoC option that might not have the absolute best performance. Now the industry is just getting to the point that a system like a direct sampling ADC/DAC integrated into a Versal might be able to process massive bandwidths at high enough bit rates that they can do useful things for military applications; it may actually be worth it now because you can push to really high data rates, and the additional processing might make up for a small loss in ADC/DAC performance. Give it a couple years for these to make it into new designs and get fielded.

So I guess the tl;dr, is that it is not because defense doesn't like integrated packages, they just haven't been worth it considering the design goals. Defense does move slow, but this is more about being able to field "military-grade" solutions that work well in challenging RF environments, and once that is possible the government will start to pay for it.

15155 [3 hidden]5 mins ago
Which comparably-priced ADC/DAC ICs are pushing 6 GSPS on 8x8 channels like the $500 (actual price, not fuck-you DigiKey price) RFSoCs?
stephen_g [3 hidden]5 mins ago
Yeah, we got a dev board of one of the higher-end RFSoc chips for a project we were doing in high-frequency trading (on the networking side over microwave), and we had to jump through a bunch of hoops for approval since they are mostly intended for defence.

Lot of phased-array radar and electronic warfare applications.

jauntywundrkind [3 hidden]5 mins ago
Crazy amazing RF chip; dunno if anyone else is keeping pace with their, especially at such high levels of integration.

> with production shipments expected to begin in the first half of 2027.

Whoa, that feels wildly far off.

tucnak [3 hidden]5 mins ago
I've been buying dip AMD since mid-2023 hoping that the Xillinx acquisition would finally pay off... eventually, it will. I'm certain of it ;-(
jauntywundrkind [3 hidden]5 mins ago
With the chiplet future here, some interconnect expertise should really really help all the chips.

Hoping to heck we see AMD not rest on the laurels & get good at CXL, start offering on chip UCE Ethernet and UALink interconnect. Also would really like to see on-package USB4 80Gbps; AMD really lead the way with getting good at IO and allowing users to reuse lanes as either PCIe or SATA or uh what was that third... Continuing to offer robust io is something Xilinx folks should be excellent at.

And yeah they should hopefully have a significant cellular revenue stream too! Grow that! It was neat seeing Lattice stop by the OCP EvenStar mailing list to promote their fpgas. Would be great to see similar outreach of Xilinx making visible motions to connect with & be in sync with our planet's better open source cellular efforts too. https://ocp-all.groups.io/g/ocp-evenstar/message/121

Also bring involved with software is required. Xilinx did great stuff with for example their bpf->fpga compiler nanotube, way before Intel's recent release of the p4->Tofino compiler Intel recently released (now that they are stepping away from Tofino, boo), https://github.com/Xilinx/nanotube

I'd love to see pushes into the software stack too. How can (another ex-Facebook effort, lol) Magma take advantage of & offload more and more to fpga, doing more cellular and more networking/smartnic? https://www.linuxfoundation.org/press/linux-foundation-conne...

spacemanspiff01 [3 hidden]5 mins ago
Any idea how many channels this is? Just says multi-channel...
hkwerf [3 hidden]5 mins ago
You can find the actual specs here: https://www.amd.com/en/products/adaptive-socs-and-fpgas/vers...

As usual, you have to accept a trade-off between different features depending on the number of channels you want.

londons_explore [3 hidden]5 mins ago
So the intended market for these are...

Lab gear...?

Does it make sense in anything with higher sales volumes, or would it always make sense to make dedicated silicon with hardware offload for one specific protocol?

5G/6G base stations?

ermir [3 hidden]5 mins ago
The primary use for these is implementing Software-Defined Radios and the primary user of these is the military. SDRs allow jamming resistance, operation in hostile radio zones, and flexible network topologies.
dezgeg [3 hidden]5 mins ago
5G basestations are on dedicated silicon already.
kristjank [3 hidden]5 mins ago
Great things are coming in the digital part of the RF field. Unfortunately, the knowledge transfer is failing greatly in the analog part of it...