Speculating: AMD and China

ericlp

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Dec 24, 2000
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https://www.techspot.com/news/75399-china-starts-production-amd-based-x86-cpus.html

Interesting Article. Especially, this part.

"Chinese made Dhyana chips are said to be virtually identical to AMD’s EPYC CPUs"

Dhyana chips are only meant to be sold and used inside Chinese borders. Wink...Wink...

I think the cat is out of the bag, and with a trade war heating up, we may all be buying chips from China in the next 2-3 years. What good is a license and promise when your countries are pissed at each other and in the middle of a heated trade war?

Could be bad news for AMD, as they could be slapped with tariffs if it gets really bad. Even intel has major investments in China, but I think AMD would take the blunt of it. If so, all licensing and promises will be off the table, and china will just undercut the entire market.... Flooding x86 chips into every country that needs one. Pretty much the entire ryzen ThreadRipper line is made in China, and I am sure there were deals to be had to sell them in China as well. If there were no deals, I'm sure china could make as many as they wanted with or without AMD's help.

All I can say is ... Trump is going to make it VERY interesting if he pushes through with his trade wars.
 
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turtile

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They aren't allowed to sell chips outside of China. And China doesn't want imported chips... AMD takes a royalty and has nothing to do with tariffs.
 

Udgnim

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Flooding x86 chips into every country that needs one

I don't know the details but I've been assuming that China only has access to a certain gen

for example, the deal allows them to make Gen 1 Zen but they don't have access to Gen 3 Zen

also not worried about China taking Gen 1 Zen and trying to make their own improvements on it since designing & making CPUs is a pretty complicated process
 

NostaSeronx

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Dhyana chips were based on 17h EPYC for engineering/sample purposes. Dhyana however is 18h and will be diverging in the first production iteration.

Family 17h Model 00h-0Fh != Family 18h Model 00h-0Fh
// Fab 16: TSMC Nanjing is scheduled to commence mass production in May 2018.
--> Should be noted that Nanjing in September 2017 had been upgraded from just 16nm to 16nm and 12nm.
Dhyana chips are only meant to be sold and used inside Chinese borders.
Dhyana can be sold anywhere AMD isn't allowed to sell. As it isn't owned in majority by AMD. Hygon doesn't have to care.
 
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ericlp

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They aren't allowed to sell chips outside of China. And China doesn't want imported chips... AMD takes a royalty and has nothing to do with tariffs.

You obviously don't know much about tariffs or Chinese governments. If china could slap tariffs on "ANYTHING" coming in or out of its borders. Regardless if it would hurt their jobs, witch it wouldn't since they are a global player. It would just push chip prices higher since, that price would be passed on to the taxpayer.

Dhyana can be sold anywhere AMD isn't allowed to sell. As it isn't owned in majority by AMD. Hygon doesn't have to care.
Wink wink! Pretty much what I, and the article said, rather your beating around the bush about it.

All AMD Zen-based CPU dies are fabbed in New York, AFAIK, in GF's Fab, that used to be IBM's Fab. None of them are Fabbed in China.

Not so fast... From Wikipedia:

Advanced Micro Devices, Inc. (AMD) is an American multinational semiconductor company based in Santa Clara, California, that develops computer processors and related technologies for business and consumer markets. While initially it manufactured its own processors, the company later outsourced its manufacturing, a practice known as fabless, after GlobalFoundries was spun off in 2009.

So since it's obvious that AMD is a fabless... So how where is GF fabing them? USA right? Of course not!

https://www.anandtech.com/show/11117/globalfoundries-to-expand-capacities-build-a-fab-in-china

China couldn't build the GABILLION dollar plant fast enough. I bet they well on their way to fabricate a million wafers per year.

"When fully ramped, the Chengdu fab will have a capacity of approximately 1,000,000 wafers per year (so, around 83,000 ~ 85,000 wafers per month for the phase 1 and phase 2 when both are fully operational) and will be a tangible manufacturing asset for GlobalFoundries. The fab is meant to fulfill increasing demand from China-based developers of semiconductors, but it will also be used to make chips for other fabless companies using primarily the 22FDX process, further increasing FD-SOI manufacturing capacities of GlobalFoundries and making the tech more attractive to customers requiring very high product volumes."

And Now... Let's get back to where Zen meets China! "full circle" to where it all began!

https://www.tomshardware.com/news/china-zen-x86-processor-dryhana,37417.html

And you can tell me all about how AMD is NOT fabbed in China...
 

turtile

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Aug 19, 2014
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You obviously don't know much about tariffs or Chinese governments. If china could slap tariffs on "ANYTHING" coming in or out of its borders. Regardless if it would hurt their jobs, witch it wouldn't since they are a global player. It would just push chip prices higher since, that price would be passed on to the taxpayer.

Why would they tax processors designed for use in their own country? The whole point the agreement is to not rely totally on foreign companies so why would you make domestic CPUs more expensive? If anything, this is good for AMD because it means AMD is making money in the Chinese server market while Intel will be blocked out.
 

Hitman928

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Apr 15, 2012
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All AMD Zen-based CPU dies are fabbed in New York, AFAIK, in GF's Fab, that used to be IBM's Fab. None of them are Fabbed in China.

Not so fast... From Wikipedia:

Advanced Micro Devices, Inc. (AMD) is an American multinational semiconductor company based in Santa Clara, California, that develops computer processors and related technologies for business and consumer markets. While initially it manufactured its own processors, the company later outsourced its manufacturing, a practice known as fabless, after GlobalFoundries was spun off in 2009.

So since it's obvious that AMD is a fabless... So how where is GF fabing them? USA right? Of course not!

https://www.anandtech.com/show/11117/globalfoundries-to-expand-capacities-build-a-fab-in-china

China couldn't build the GABILLION dollar plant fast enough. I bet they well on their way to fabricate a million wafers per year.

"When fully ramped, the Chengdu fab will have a capacity of approximately 1,000,000 wafers per year (so, around 83,000 ~ 85,000 wafers per month for the phase 1 and phase 2 when both are fully operational) and will be a tangible manufacturing asset for GlobalFoundries. The fab is meant to fulfill increasing demand from China-based developers of semiconductors, but it will also be used to make chips for other fabless companies using primarily the 22FDX process, further increasing FD-SOI manufacturing capacities of GlobalFoundries and making the tech more attractive to customers requiring very high product volumes."

And Now... Let's get back to where Zen meets China! "full circle" to where it all began!

https://www.tomshardware.com/news/china-zen-x86-processor-dryhana,37417.html

And you can tell me all about how AMD is NOT fabbed in China...

Zen is manufactured on 14 nm (and now 12 nm) Finfet. The fab in China is tooled for older 180 nm, 130 nm, as well as new 22 nm FD-SOI production. So no, Zen is not manufactured in China. It's in your own links.
 

Vattila

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Oct 22, 2004
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Here are some of my thoughts on Hygon Dhyana:

  • Obviously it is very much based on Zen 1, as the changes for Linux compatibility where minimal. The way it looks to me, Hygon has a license from AMD to the Zen 1 core (much akin to licensing e.g. a Cortex-A76 core from ARM).

  • I very much doubt they have an architectural license (akin to architectural licenses from ARM, which allow the client to design their own ISA compatible core).

  • As such, Hygon is not a CPU architecture designer. I suspect they just design the SoC to their liking, based on the Zen CCX design block, perhaps with a custom security processor for the Chinese market, and perhaps minor adaptations of the CPU microcode and un-core parts.

  • AMD gets royalties for each Dhyana CPU sold (akin to ARM getting royalties for their cores sold).

  • As Zen 2 arrives, Dhyana will be one generation behind. Both may compete in China, provided there is no restriction on AMD processors imposed.

  • Hygon may buy a license for Zen 2, I guess, if and when it is made available from AMD. If so, AMD has the opportunity to get another round of license income. Repeat for Zen 3, etc.

  • The Zen CCX IP block that is licensed to Hygon is probably designed for Samsung/GlobalFoundries 14LPP process. I doubt that the license allows Hygon to implement it on another process (unlike speculation I've read elsewhere, that claim that Dhyana will be manufactured in China on an FD-SOI process). However, should it be that Hygon wants a version for FD-SOI, to be produced in China, it is conceivable that AMD will do the work and license it. Which means AMD may itself introduce products based on FD-SOI.

Interestingly, there is a rumour that the JV will be extended to graphics IP as well, so we could have this licensing scheme going for APUs and discrete GPUs as well.
 
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Thala

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Nov 12, 2014
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Here are some of my thoughts on Hygon Dhyana:

  • Obviously it is very much based on Zen 1, as the changes for Linux compatibility where minimal. The way it looks to me, Hygon has a license from AMD to the Zen 1 core (much akin to licensing e.g. a Cortex-A76 core from ARM).
There are 2 main differences compared to an ARM license:
  • You get the soft IP from ARM and you put it into your design for whatever manufacturing technology - as you pointed out later, this is most likely much different to the AMD license
  • ARM is only IP provider - it does not manufacture and bring ARM designs to market - so there are no conflicting interests - contrary to the EPYC - Dhyana deal
 
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jpiniero

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China being China I doubt AMD sees a dime beyond what they paid initially. Just think of it as a way for China to kickstart their chip development. I'm sure they are also happy to get chips without any NSA backdoors.
 

DiogoDX

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Oct 11, 2012
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I'm seeing some posts on other forums talking badly about AMD's lack of patriotism.

LOL

Asking to be faithful to the same government that allowed Intel to almost bury AMD with anti-competitive practices that they only got sheltered in the European court.
 

SPBHM

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Sep 12, 2012
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I doubt that they can control the used market, once these chips are out, if they are compatible with normal motherboards, good luck,

China is my favorite source of cheap used CPUs, from sites like aliexpress.
 

dark zero

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Zen is manufactured on 14 nm (and now 12 nm) Finfet. The fab in China is tooled for older 180 nm, 130 nm, as well as new 22 nm FD-SOI production. So no, Zen is not manufactured in China. It's in your own links.
Maybe did you tought that Zen was not supposed to be 22nm first?

Why do you think Zen got delayed so much to be 14 nm instead 22nm which was near to be ready to appear?

And 22nm FD-SOI is at worst 15% slower than 14nm FinFet... Near Ivy Bridge levels and for Chinese that is enough to start.
 

NostaSeronx

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And 22nm FD-SOI is at worst 15% slower than 14nm FinFet... Near Ivy Bridge levels and for Chinese that is enough to start.
22FDX is slower than FinFETs without body biasing. No designer however is using FDSOI without body biasing however.

https://pbs.twimg.com/media/DKMB-STUMAA6wWU.jpg
https://mmbiz.qpic.cn/mmbiz_jpg/RCK...VZ4mUp8Fgv6vjT6GQkwCiaZqOONmcRw/0?wx_fmt=jpeg
https://hk.saowen.com/a/54a10ed6dd0939782f5ac13b11693aff030affcb73c6d299c03fc7b2c22a0c61

GlobalFoundries to China:
22FDX is faster than our 14LPP and is cheaper than our 28LP.
12FDX is on-par with our 7LP and is cheaper than our 14LPP.

However GlobalFoundries is severally undercutting DTCO(Co-optimizer), CTI(Continuous transistor enhancement), 22FDX+(15nm BOX(with BOX creep) rather than 20nm BOX), etc.

//22FDX is on the same process as 14FD(STM) and 22FDX+ is on the same process as 14FD+(STM).
https://hal.archives-ouvertes.fr/hal-01719489
22FDX+/14FD+ is everything post-license agreement. (2015~2017 in re-released 2018 22FDX+/14FD+ node), 12FDX is strained 14FD+ natively, and will have a plus version on 10FD(FMG).

22FDX+ is as fast as 16-11-nm FinFETs, with body biasing it is comparable with 10LPP. If AMD is going to run any process it is going to be HIGH PERFORMANCE. Which explains why UHP disappeared from recent 22FDX documentation; 30th June 2016 (when I found out).

https://i.imgur.com/KOYu5AD.png
22FDX+ is in between 22FDX and 12FDX.
What is also in between 22FDX and 12FDX? 14LPP.
----
What does this have to with Dhyana? Nothing.

Dhyana is going to TSMC Nanjing like the ZX-E from Zhaoxin.
 
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CatMerc

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Jul 16, 2016
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22FDX is slower than FinFETs without body biasing. No designer however is using FDSOI without body biasing however.

https://pbs.twimg.com/media/DKMB-STUMAA6wWU.jpg
https://mmbiz.qpic.cn/mmbiz_jpg/RCK...VZ4mUp8Fgv6vjT6GQkwCiaZqOONmcRw/0?wx_fmt=jpeg
https://hk.saowen.com/a/54a10ed6dd0939782f5ac13b11693aff030affcb73c6d299c03fc7b2c22a0c61

GlobalFoundries to China:
22FDX is faster than our 14LPP and is cheaper than our 28LP.
12FDX is on-par with our 7LP and is cheaper than our 14LPP.

However GlobalFoundries is severally undercutting DTCO(Co-optimizer), CTI(Continuous transistor enhancement), 22FDX+(15nm BOX(with BOX creep) rather than 20nm BOX), etc.

//22FDX is on the same process as 14FD(STM) and 22FDX+ is on the same process as 14FD+(STM).
https://hal.archives-ouvertes.fr/hal-01719489
22FDX+/14FD+ is everything post-license agreement. (2015~2017 in re-released 2018 22FDX+/14FD+ node), 12FDX is strained 14FD+ natively, and will have a plus version on 10FD(FMG).

22FDX+ is as fast as 16-11-nm FinFETs, with body biasing it is comparable with 10LPP. If AMD is going to run any process it is going to be HIGH PERFORMANCE. Which explains why UHP disappeared from recent 22FDX documentation; 30th June 2016 (when I found out).

https://i.imgur.com/KOYu5AD.png
22FDX+ is in between 22FDX and 12FDX.
What is also in between 22FDX and 12FDX? 14LPP.
----
What does this have to with Dhyana? Nothing.

Dhyana is going to TSMC Nanjing like the ZX-E from Zhaoxin.
The performance comparability is only true with small dies with low wire capacitance. FinFETs are still the best for dies larger than 150mm^2~, by Garry Patton's own words.

https://www.anandtech.com/show/1243...ew-with-dr-gary-patton-cto-of-globalfoundries

When I say that, I should qualify: you are not going to get that from a big chip. If you are making a big chip, you got tons of wire capacitance, so you are not going to beat a FinFET design. FinFET has huge drive current, so if you're dealing with smaller chips, wiring capacitance isn't as a big, but gate capacitance of the transistor is more important. FD-SOI has less gate capacitance than FinFET because you don't have the gate wrapping around the whole device. So it is ideally suited for smaller chips, I say less than 150 square millimeters.

A die shrunk Raven Ridge (still 4c and 11 CU's) might be best on 12FDX, but at the 200mm^2 AMD seems to be targeting, FinFETs still give you the best result.
 
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Hitman928

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Maybe did you tought that Zen was not supposed to be 22nm first?

Why do you think Zen got delayed so much to be 14 nm instead 22nm which was near to be ready to appear?

And 22nm FD-SOI is at worst 15% slower than 14nm FinFet... Near Ivy Bridge levels and for Chinese that is enough to start.

Even if what you say is true, it still has nothing to do with my post that you quoted or the posts that I was responding to. Unless you think that AMD is secretly fabbing some Ryzen CPUs on 22FDX in the Chengdu China foundry for some reason.
 

NostaSeronx

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Sep 18, 2011
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The performance comparability is only true with small dies with low wire capacitance.
We'll have to see, Cwire is cheaper to mitigate overall. I'll watch Oracle if they make a move to 12FDX.
https://patents.google.com/patent/US9910951B2/
https://patents.google.com/patent/US7484199B2/

Asymmetrical/Asynchronous Circuit Designs seem to be the main design focus for FDSOI. Which basically does xPU within the die. So Cwire in huge designs aren't a concern to most Cryptos.
A die shrunk Raven Ridge (still 4c and 11 CU's) might be best on 12FDX, but at the 200mm^2 AMD seems to be targeting, FinFETs still give you the best result.
Bobcat => 75 mm squared (40nm)
Jaguar => 107 mm squared (28nm)
Excavator in Stoney => 125 mm squared (28nm)
Zen in Raven Ridge-L(Not Raven Ridge2)
or non-disclosed architecture in non-disclosed SoC => ??? mm squared

In regards to China, Hygon in their non-Server/Workstation asic might use FDSOI. Competition with Zhaoxin without FinFETs. ZX-D = 187 mm squared, ZX-E has a shrink of that plus ZX-200 integrated on 16nm TSMC Nanjing.

TSMC Nanjing with all phases is 40,000 wafers per month. (16nm/12nm FinFET) <== 4th 2018
GloFo Chengdu with FDSOI phase is 65,000 wafers per month. (22nm FDSOI) <== 4th 2019
HLMC with FinFET/FDSOI phase 40,000 wafers per month. (14nm FinFET and 22nm FDSOI) <== 4th 2019 for 22FD, and 2nd 2020 for 14FF.
UMC Xiamen(12,000~16,000 wafers) and SMIC Beijing(35,000+ wafers) might join the FDSOI build-up in China as well.
 
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