• Source: TILE-Gx
  • TILE-Gx was a VLIW ISA multicore processor family designed by Tilera. It consisted of a mesh network that was expected to scale up to 100 cores, but only 72-core variants actually shipped.
    After a few acquisitions, Tilera's designs ended up in the hands of Nvidia, which ended production of TILE-Gx processors in 2022. In June 2018, the Linux kernel dropped support for this architecture. Tile-Gx processors were used in MikroTik's CCR1000 series routers, and MikroTik continues to support this architecture out-of-tree in its RouterOS Linux distribution.


    Product lineup


    Common features of TILE-Gx processors:

    64-bit VLIW RISC core (3-issue)
    4 MAC/cycle with SIMD extensions
    L1 cache: 64 KB (32 KB data + 32 KB instruction) per core.
    L2 cache: 256 KB per core.
    L3 cache: Other core's L2 cache connected via mesh network.
    1, 2, or 4 ECC 72-bit DDR3 controllers.
    Up to 24 PCIe 2.0 lanes.
    Optional built-in crypto accelerator with 40 Gbit/s encryption (small packet) and 20 Gbit/s full-duplex compression, true random number generator, RSA accelerator.
    Fabrication process: TSMC 40nm.


    See also


    TILE64
    TILEPro64


    References


    "Tilera Corporation Joins China's Wireless TD Forum as a Senior Member" (Press release). Tilera. 26 October 2009. Archived from the original on 26 July 2011. Retrieved 16 June 2011.

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