2. The PAC with Stratix 10 board brings high-end configurable FPGAs to the party.
The boards include four DDR DIMMs for a total of 32 GB of off-chip memory. The 14-nm FPGA includes 2.8 million lookup tables (LUTs). The PAC has a pair of 100-Gb/s PCIe Gen 3 interfaces; the three-quarter slot board uses only 225 W.
The board can be used for artificial-intelligence chores, but is more likely to be employed for applications like Adaptive Micro-Ware’s video transcode, Megh Computing’s streaming analytics, and risk analysis. The software is now integrated with platforms like VMware vSphere 6.7 Update 1; drivers are being incorporated into the Linux. The integration with rack management and orchestration frameworks enables multiple boards to be incorporated into high-performance compute environments.
Intel is working to bring the Intel Workload Storefront to developers. It will provide a way to test and deploy FPGA-based services available from third parties. This would include per-node and metered licensing.
These platforms don’t make it any easier to develop a program for the FPGA, although Intel’s OpenCL FPGA support significantly simplifies certain applications already written for OpenCL. The hardware and software framework does make it much easier to deploy systems once the applications are developed.