Engineering:Drive PX-series
The Nvidia Drive PX is a series of computers aimed at providing autonomous car and driver assistance functionality powered by deep learning.[1] The platform was introduced at the Consumer Electronics Show (CES) in Las Vegas in January 2015.[2] An enhanced version, the Drive PX 2 was introduced at CES a year later, in January 2016.[3]
Maxwell based
The first of Nvidia's autonomous chips was announced at CES 2015, based on the Maxwell GPU microarchitecture.[4] The line-up existed of two platforms: Drive CX for digital cockpits.
Drive CX
The Drive CX was based on a single Tegra X1 SoC (System on a Chip) and was marketed as a digital cockpit computer, providing a rich dashboard, navigation and multimedia experience. Early Nvidia press releases reported that the Drive CX board will be capable of carrying either a Tegra K1 or a Tegra X1.[5]
Drive PX
The first version of Drive PX is based on two Tegra X1 SoCs. It is targeted at (semi-)autonomous driving cars, and is being applied by Toyota.[6]
Pascal based
Drive PX platforms based on the Pascal GPU microarchitecture were first announced at CES 2016.[7] This time only a new version of Drive PX was announced, but in multiple configurations.
Drive PX 2
The Nvidia Drive PX 2 is based on one or two Tegra X2 SoCs where each SoC contains 2 Denver cores, 4 ARM A57 cores and a GPU from the Pascal generation.[8] There are two real world board configurations:
- for AutoCruise: 1x Tegra X2
- for AutoChauffeur: 2x Tegra X2 + 2 Pascal GPU's
There is further the proposal from Nvidia for fully autonomous driving by means of combining multiple items of the AutoChauffeur board variant and connecting these boards using e.g. UART, CAN, LIN, FlexRay, USB, 1 Gbit Ethernet or 10 Gbit Ethernet. For any derived custom PCB design the option of linking the Tegra X2 Processors via some PCIe bus bridge is further available, according to board block diagrams that can be found on the web.
All Tesla Motors vehicles manufactured from mid-October 2016 include a Drive PX 2, which will be used for neural net processing to enable Enhanced Autopilot and full self-driving functionality.[9] Other applications are Roborace.[10] Disassembling the Nvidia-based control unit from a recent Tesla car showed that a Tesla was using a modified single-chip Drive PX 2 AutoCruise, with a GP106 GPU added as a MXM Module. The chip markings gave strong hints for the Tegra X2 Parker as the CPU SoC.[11][12]
Volta based
Systems based on the Volta GPU microarchitecture were first announced at CES 2017[13]
Drive PX Xavier
The first Volta based Drive PX system was announced at CES 2017 as the Xavier AI Car Supercomputer.[13] It was re-presented at CES 2018 as Drive PX Xavier.[14][15] Initial reports of the Xavier SoC suggested a single chip with similar processing power to the Drive PX 2 Autochauffeur system.[16] However, in 2017 the performance of the Xavier-based system was later revised upward, to 50% greater than Drive PX 2 Autochauffeur system.[13] Drive PX Xavier is supposed to deliver 30 INT8 TOPS of performance while consuming only 30 watts of power.[17] This spreads across two distinct units, the iGPU with 20 INT8 TOPS as published early and the somewhat later on announced, newly introduced DLA that provided an additional 10 INT8 TOPS.
Drive PX Pegasus
In October 2017 Nvidia and partner development companies announced the Drive PX Pegasus system, based upon two Xavier CPU/GPU devices and two post-Volta generation GPUs. The companies stated the third generation Drive PX system would be capable of Level 5 autonomous driving, with a total of 320 INT8 TOPS of AI computational power and a 500 Watts TDP.[18][19]
Comparison
Nvidia provided reference board |
Drive CX | Drive PX | Drive PX 2
(AutoCruise) |
Drive PX 2
(Tesla) |
Drive PX 2
(AutoChauffeur) |
Drive PX Xavier[15] | Drive PX Pegasus[20] |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
GPU Microarchitecture | Maxwell (28 nm) | Pascal (16 nm) | Volta (12 nm) | ||||
Introduced | January 2015 | September 2016[21] | October 2016[22] | January 2016 | January 2017 | October 2017 | |
Computing | 1x Tegra X1 | 2x Tegra X1 | 1x Tegra X2 (Parker) | 2x Tegra X2 (Parker)
+ 2x Pascal GPU |
1x Tegra Xavier[23] | 2x Tegra Xavier | |
CPU | 4x Cortex A57
4x Cortex A53 |
8x Cortex A57
8x Cortex A53 |
2x Denver
4x Cortex A57 |
4x Denver
8x Cortex A57 |
8x NVIDIA Custom Carmel ARM64[23] | 16x NVIDIA Custom Carmel ARM64 | |
GPU | 2 SMM Maxwell
256 CUDA cores |
4 SMM Maxwell
512 CUDA cores |
1x Parker GPGPU
(1x 2 SM Pascal, 256 CUDA cores) |
1x Parker GPGPU
(1x 2 SM Pascal, 256 CUDA cores) + 1x dedicated MXM module[24] |
2x Parker GPGPU
(2x 2 SM Pascal, 512 CUDA cores) |
1x Volta iGPU (512 CUDA cores)[23] | 2x Volta iGPU (512 CUDA cores)
2x post-Volta dGPUs |
Accelerator | 1x DLA[23] | 2x DLA | |||||
Memory | 8GB LPDDR4[26] | 16GB LPDDR4[26] | LPDDR4[23] | ||||
Storage | 64GB eMMC[26] | 128GB eMMC[26] | |||||
Performance | 20 INT8 TOPS, 1.3 FP32 TFLOPS (GPU) 10 INT8 TOPS, 5 FP16 TFLOPS (DLA)[23] |
320 INT8 TOPS (total) | |||||
TDP | < 125W
SoC portion: 10 W[21] |
125W | 250W | 30W[23] | 500W |
Note: dGPU and memory are stand-alone semiconductors; all other components, especially ARM cores, iGPU and DLA are integrated components of the listed main computing device(s)
References
- ↑ Umar Zakir Abdul, Hamid (2016). "Current Collision Mitigation Technologies for Advanced Driver Assistance Systems–A Survey". PERINTIS eJournal 6 (2). https://www.researchgate.net/profile/Umar_Zakir_Abdul_Hamid/publication/311981545_Current_Collision_Mitigation_Technologies_for_Advanced_Driver_Assistance_Systems_-_A_Survey/links/586670d108ae329d62074a57.pdf. Retrieved 14 June 2017.
- ↑ "Cars drive autonomously with Nvidia X1-based computer". Cnet. Cnet. 5 January 2015. http://www.cnet.com/roadshow/news/cars-drive-autonomously-with-nvidia-x1-based-computer/. Retrieved 29 March 2016.
- ↑ "Nvidia Announces Another Car ‘Supercomputer’ at CES". The Wall Street Journal. 4 January 2016. https://blogs.wsj.com/digits/2016/01/04/nvidia-announces-another-car-supercomputer-at-ces/. Retrieved 29 March 2016.
- ↑ Smith, Joshua Ho, Ryan. "NVIDIA Tegra X1 Preview & Architecture Analysis". http://www.anandtech.com/show/8811/nvidia-tegra-x1-preview/4.
- ↑ NVIDIA ebnet den Weg für die Autos von Morgen mit den NVIDIA-DRIVE-Automotive-Computern
- ↑ Lambert, Fred (10 May 2017). "Toyota and NVIDIA strike a deal to bring to market autonomous cars ‘within next few years’". Electrek. https://electrek.co/2017/05/10/toyota-nvidia-autonomous-cars/. Retrieved 21 May 2017.
- ↑ Smith, Ryan. "NVIDIA Announces DRIVE PX 2 – Pascal Power For Self-Driving Cars". http://www.anandtech.com/show/9903/nvidia-announces-drive-px-2-pascal-power-for-selfdriving-cars.
- ↑ "Autonomous Car Development Platform from NVIDIA DRIVE PX2". http://www.nvidia.com/object/drive-px.html.
- ↑ Lambert, Fred (21 October 2016). "All new Teslas are equipped with NVIDIA’s new Drive PX 2 AI platform for self-driving". Electrek. https://electrek.co/2016/10/21/all-new-teslas-are-equipped-with-nvidias-new-drive-px-2-ai-platform-for-self-driving/. Retrieved 25 January 2017.
- ↑ Dow, Jameson (20 May 2017). "Roborace debuts their driverless "Robocar" on track at the Paris ePrix". Electrek. https://electrek.co/2017/05/20/roborace-debuts-their-driverless-robocar-on-track-at-the-paris-eprix/. Retrieved 21 May 2017.
- ↑ Look inside Tesla’s onboard Nvidia supercomputer for self-driving
- ↑ Why Tesla’s Nvidia Supercomputer for Self-Driving is not as Powerful as Expected
- ↑ 13.0 13.1 13.2 Cutress, Ian; Tallis, Billy (4 January 2016). "CES 2017: Nvidia Keynote Liveblog". Anandtech.com. http://www.anandtech.com/show/10999/ces-2017-nvidia-keynote-live-blog. Retrieved 9 January 2017.
- ↑ Baldwin, Roberto (8 January 2018). "NVIDIA unveils its powerful Xavier SOC for self-driving cars". Engadget. https://www.engadget.com/2018/01/07/nvidia-xavier-soc-self-driving-cars/. Retrieved 8 January 2018.
- ↑ 15.0 15.1 Autonomous Car Development Platform from NVIDIA DRIVE PX2
- ↑ Smith, Ryan (28 September 2016). "Nvidia Teases Xavier, A High Performance SoC for Drive PX & AI". Anandtech. http://www.anandtech.com/show/10714/nvidia-teases-xavier-a-highperformance-arm-soc. Retrieved 22 June 2017.
- ↑ "Autonomous Car Development Platform from NVIDIA DRIVE PX2" (in en-us). https://www.nvidia.com/en-us/self-driving-cars/drive-px/.
- ↑ Oh, Nate. "NVIDIA Announces Drive PX Pegasus at GTC Europe 2017: Level 5 Self-Driving Hardware, Feat. Post-Volta GPUs". https://www.anandtech.com/show/11913/nvidia-announces-drive-px-pegasus-at-gtc-europe-2017-feat-nextgen-gpus.
- ↑ Auchard, Eric (10 October 2017). "NVIDIA unveils next-generation platform for fully autonomous cars". Reuters. https://ca.reuters.com/article/technologyNews/idCAKBN1CF13F-OCATC. Retrieved 17 October 2017.
- ↑ Oh, Nate. "NVIDIA Announces Drive PX Pegasus at GTC Europe 2017: Level 5 Self-Driving Hardware, Feat. Post-Volta GPUs". https://www.anandtech.com/show/11913/nvidia-announces-drive-px-pegasus-at-gtc-europe-2017-feat-nextgen-gpus.
- ↑ 21.0 21.1 Nvidia unveils palm-sized single SoC version of the DRIVE PX2
- ↑ "All Tesla Cars Being Produced Now Have Full Self-Driving Hardware". https://www.tesla.com/blog/all-tesla-cars-being-produced-now-have-full-self-driving-hardware.
- ↑ 23.0 23.1 23.2 23.3 23.4 23.5 23.6 NVIDIA Xavier SOC Is The Most Biggest and Complex SOC To Date
- ↑ "Look inside Tesla’s onboard Nvidia supercomputer for self-driving" (in en-US). Electrek. 2017-05-22. https://electrek.co/2017/05/22/tesla-nvidia-supercomputer-self-driving-autopilot/.
- ↑ NVIDIA Announces Pascal GPU Powered Drive PX 2 – 16nm FinFET Based, Liquid Cooled AI Supercomputer With 8 TFLOPs Performance
- ↑ 26.0 26.1 26.2 26.3 "Hardware" (in en). NVIDIA Developer. 2017-03-30. https://developer.nvidia.com/drive/hardware.