AMD Processors Get ARM Security Processor
Over the past year there has been much speculation that AMD and ARM
would enter some sort of an IP licensing deal. Many expected to hear
some big announcement like AMD licensing ARM’s CPU cores or ARM
licensing AMD's Radeon IP, but that didn't exactly happen. Yesterday
at the AMD Fusion Developer Summit AMD announced the HSA foundation. The
HSA Foundation partners AMD, ARM Imagination, MediaTek and Texas
Instruments to come up with an open standard, you can find the full
story on that here. Today though, AMD is extending the partnership with ARM to further reaches and has signed a licensing agreement with the company!
AMD just announced that they are going to start implementing new
security measures into their future APU's (Accelerated Processing
Units) by using an ARM Cortex-A5 processor with TrustZone Technology.
This means that AMD is licensing ARM cores and actually integrating them
into their x86 based APUs as a platform security processor. AMD told us
the company's "commitment to x86 hasn't changed," and that x86 is still
here to stay.
AMD has been working on this for some time and is going to start
introducing this technology select APU's in 2013. The first devices to
see this technology should be fanless class (tablets and other small
mobile devices). By the end of 2014 it will be implemented across AMD's
entire product stack.
.
By utilizing a system-on-a-chip (SoC) design,
AMD will begin
incorporating an ARM Cortex-A5 CPU into the APU. The ARM Cortex-A5 CPU
has been around for some time and features TrustZone technology which monitors and helps to protect the
system from malicious access to data and operations at a hardware level.
Adding the ARM Cortex-A5 cores and memory should be tough for AMD to
do and it will not impact the manufacturing process. AMD informed it
that it takes up a very little die space and will site off to the right
side of the northbridge area. This allows it to power up first on the
SoC and since the A5 processor has existing ecosystem with certified
kernels it should easy to program for.
Shown above is the quad core version of the Cortex-A5. AMD did not
mention how many cores will be included on for the platform security
processor, but if we had to guess it would be less than four. By the
time AMD releases processors with ARM IP on the we believe AMD will be
manufacturing on the 28nm process, so adding just one or two cores
shouldn't take up much space at all. After some quick math on our end we
would guess the area to be smaller than 20mm^2.
The fact that AMD will be implementing a Cortex-A5 processor into AMD
APUs might come as a shock to some, but remember that AMD is moving to a
heterogeneous computing business model. Using an ARM Cortex-A5 CPU that
features TrustZone technology to monitor and help protect against
malicious access to sensitive data and operations at the hardware level
looks like a good move for the future and will likely open the door to
emerging technologies like NFC. The future looks good!
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