Kalray Readies Second-Generation Bostan Processor to Accelerate the Data Center

By Paula Bernier, Executive Editor, TMC  |  November 12, 2015

European processor company Kalray, which two years ago introduced the 256-core programmable processor called Andey, in the first quarter of 2016 will come out with Bostan – a second-generation solution that will take real-time processing performance to a whole new level. This new chip, and the acceleration boards and smart NICs that will be based on it, will deliver multiples of the processing capabilities of Andey and will include other new features aimed at addressing today’s network, security, and storage acceleration requirements.

One of the boards that will leverage  Bostan will perform on-the-fly encryption. Jean-Pierre Demange, vice president of sales and marketing of Kalray, said that not only is this solution very fast in terms of performance, it also allows for expedited go-to-market. The  Bostan-based boards are sampling now and will be generally available in the first quarter of 2016.

Kalray is also in the midst of introducing a smart NIC (News - Alert) (News https://images.tmcnet.com/tmc/vertical/financial/images/chart_icon.gif- Alert) called Konic80, which is programmable so users can support new functionality and protocols as those needs present themselves. That’s important given the pace of change in technology today and the wide array of protocols (such as  Virtualization protocols like NVGRE, VXLAN…) that continue to make an appearance. It takes a lot of time and effort to change ASICs, Demange noted, so Konic does not employ an ASIC. Rather, it’s based on the  Bostan processor. Konic80 is also sampling now and slated for general availability in the first quarter of next year. 

Seven-year-old Kalray provides its solutions to a variety of businesses and cloud solutions and data centers. Its competitors, some of which have ASIC solutions as opposed to processor-based ones like Kalray does, include Cavium, EZchip (which Mellanox (News - Alert) (News - Alert) Technologies recently announced its intention to buy), and Netronome.

Demange, who spoke with me earlier this week at TMC (News - Alert) Editor’s Day Silicon Valley, said Kalray is well positioned to accelerate the data center. The company, he said, doesn’t want to play in the server marketplace, but he added that the X.86 platforms that are prevalent in data centers are not deterministic. So Kalray offers high-speed I/O processors, which act as high-speed switches to connect data between Ethernet and PCI (News - Alert) (News - Alert) while offering on the fly processing.

Get stories like this delivered straight to your inbox. [Free eNews Subscription]