China's road to homegrown chip glory looks to be going for a RISC-V future

The RISC-V Summit is over - here's what you need to know

By Agam Shah  Thu 9 Dec 2021  
https://www.theregister.com/2021/12/09/china_homegrown_chips/


China's been scammed for billions by rogues in its chase to become a chip 
powerhouse, though ironically, a free, open-source CPU architecture is emerging 
as its best bet to create a powerful homegrown chip.

China was a winner at this week's RISC-V Summit, with many organizations 
introducing CPUs based on RISC-V, an open-source chip architecture sometimes 
called the Linux of chips.

The government-backed Chinese Academy of Sciences, which is on the US Entity 
List, and StarFive Technology released new RISC-V chip designs for PCs and 
servers.

The profile of RISC-V is growing with backing from companies including Apple, 
Intel, Google and Nvidia.

And, RISC-V development is especially picking up in China, with Alibaba in 
October opening code of the XuanTie custom-built processors based on RISC-V 
instruction, and is porting Android 10 to RISC-V ISA.

The country has poured billions into making homegrown chips with the aim of 
being self-sufficient in the technology.

Another goal is to cut the reliance on foreign countries, with chip technology 
being used as leverage by US in its trade war against China.

For example, the US is limiting chip technology exports to the Chinese Academy 
of Sciences, which has now turned to RISC-V for CPU development. The 
organization in 2010 developed the MIPS-based Loongson chip, and the latest 
chip release earlier this year mixes MIPS with RISC-V.

RISC-V provides a chance to break away from the monolithic structure driving 
the development, production and distribution of chips, and to create a level 
playing field for smaller chip makers, Brookwood said.

Move fast and break stuff

"We take advantage of the community. We break down corporate barriers, country 
barriers, cultural barriers, timezone barriers, and we all share that piece 
because we all know is that we are part of this community," Mark Himelstein, 
chief technology officer at RISC-V International, told The Register.

The newer Chinese chip designs introduced at RISC-V Summit aren't as advanced 
as the fastest x86 and Arm CPU cores, though the goal is to produce a 
competitive alternative with richer features, if not the latest and greatest 
eventually.

The Chinese Academy of Sciences announced the latest addition to the 
open-source XiangShan 64-bit chip family, dubbed Nanhu, which will tape out 
next year. This second-generation design operates at 2GHz, and is close to 
twice as fast as its first-generation predecessor, the Yanqihu, which was 
released six months ago and targets a 28nm process.

Nanhu is designed for a 14nm process, which means the chip could be made inside 
China at a fab run by SMIC, which operates at that node. While not as advanced 
as the cutting-edge 5nm and 4nm nodes run by Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing 
Co., Nanhu does close the manufacturing gap.

Just 30 people – 25 graduate students and five engineers – worked on the 
RISC-V-compatible Yanqihu, said Yungang Bao, a professor at Chinese Academy of 
Sciences' Institute of Computing Technology, during a presentation at the 
RISC-V Summit in San Francisco. Given the cooperative nature of RISC-V, some of 
Nanhu's features draw from open-source blueprints, such as SiFive's Block 
Inclusive Cache, the professor said.

"For us, we will not launch a startup to commercialize, but we hope there are 
some other companies to do that," Yungang said, adding: "We would like to see a 
company like Red Hat for RISC-V."

StarFive meanwhile introduced Dubhe, an out-of-order mainstream computing chip 
design that operates at 2GHz on Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co.'s 12nm 
process.

The microprocessor includes various RISC-V extensions, such as the bit 
manipulation one also implemented in XiangShan, plus an implementation of the 
newly ratified RISC-V hypervisor extension. That's the virtualization extension 
SiFive's top-end P650 RISC-V CPU core also supports.

There are challenges. If Nvidia doesn't acquire Arm, a merger that now looks 
highly unlikely, this failure could be a temporary roadblock in RISC-V's 
expansion, Brookwood said.

Arm is more like a Switzerland of the semiconductor world with its neutral 
stance. Companies were ready to ditch Arm if Nvidia took control, and that 
exodus may slow if the takeover doesn't happen, Brookwood said.

Meanwhile, some SiFive executives told us that, in their mind, it doesn't 
matter if Nvidia absorbs Arm or not: if it does, RISC-V looks more attractive, 
and if it doesn't, Arm will be left facing off against a growing number of 
RISC-V processor designers, they argued.

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