Friday, April 4th 2025

China's RiVAI Technologies Introduces "Lingyu" RISC-V Server Processor

RiVAI Technologies, a Shenzhen-based semiconductor firm founded in 2018, unveiled this first fully domestic high-performance RISC-V server processor designed for compute-intensive applications. The Lingyu CPU features 32 general-purpose computing cores working alongside eight specialized intelligent computing cores (LPUs) in a heterogeneous "one-core, dual architecture" design. It aims for performance comparable to current x86 server processors, with the chip implementing optimized data pathways and enhanced pipelining mechanisms to maintain high clock frequencies under computational load. The architecture specifically targets maximum throughput for parallel processing workloads typical in data center environments. The chip aims to serve HPC clusters, all-flash storage arrays, and AI large language model inference operations.

Since its inception, RiVAI has accumulated 37 RISC-V-related patents and established partnerships with over 50 industry collaborators, including academic research relationships. Professor David Patterson, a RISC-V architecture pioneer, provides technical guidance to the company's development efforts. The processor's dual-architecture approach enables dynamic workload distribution between conventional processing tasks and specialized computational operations, potentially improving performance-per-watt metrics compared to traditional single-architecture designs. The Lingyu launch significantly advances China's semiconductor self-sufficiency strategy, potentially accelerating RISC-V ecosystem development while providing Chinese data centers with domestically engineered high-performance computing solutions, ultimately bypassing x86 and Arm solutions.
Sources: TMT Post, via Tom's Hardware
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5 Comments on China's RiVAI Technologies Introduces "Lingyu" RISC-V Server Processor

#1
ncrs
Great, now let's see independent third-party benchmarks of it.
Posted on Reply
#2
_roman_
Come on sell devices in europe in the standard atx formfactor with replaceable components.
Posted on Reply
#3
Rover4444
Patents? LAME! That prior art must be a nightmare to sort through. x86 stuff before 2005 should be public domain now, I wonder if somebody will do something with that?
Posted on Reply
#4
JasBC
The image of the CPU is AI-generated. . .
Posted on Reply
Apr 7th, 2025 10:14 HKT change timezone

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