Off-Prem

PaaS + IaaS

Microsoft's Arm-based Cobalt 100 CPU now live and powering Azure VMs

For general-purpose and memory-optimized workloads


Microsoft's Cobalt 100 Arm CPUs have reached general availability in its Azure cloud, creating another non-x86 option for running VMs in the Redmondian cloud.

The processors power three instance types: the Dpsv6, Dplsv6, and Epsv6.

The first two instance types are intended for general purpose computing. The Dpsv6 instances offer VMs ranging from two virtual CPUs and 8GiB of memory at list price of $51 a month all the way to monsters with 96 vCPUs and 384GiB of RAM that will set you back $2,460. Microsoft reckons they're suited to web and application servers, small to medium databases, or running caches.

Keen-eyed readers may have noticed that the VMs above offer 4GiB of memory per vCPU. The Dplsv6 instance type halves that, and prices come down accordingly to $45 a month for the smallest machine and $2,172 for the 96-core beast. Redmond recommends these to run microservices, small databases, caches, and gaming servers.

The Epsv6 VMs offer 8GiB per vCPU. Prices pop to $67 a month for a pair of vCPUs, and $3,230 for 96 vCPUs. That config makes them suitable for relational database servers, large databases, data analytics engines, and in-memory caches.

The prices quoted above can shrink if you sign up for long-term use or can tolerate the risk that comes with using spot instances.

As our sibling publication The Next Platform noted when Microsoft announced the Cobalt 100, the chip appears to be based on the Neoverse Compute Subsystems N2 design offered by Arm as a template on which to build processors, was built by TSMC on a five nanometer process and has 128 cores – the result of combining two 64-core tiles. It's unclear why Microsoft doesn't offer a 128-core VM.

Microsoft is of course publicizing lovely performance numbers: the Cobalt-powered VMs are apparently up to 1.4 times faster "compared to previous generations of Azure Arm-based VMs," and also up to 1.5 times faster when running Java workloads, and perform twice as well when running web servers, .NET applications, and in-memory cache applications.

"These VMs also support 4x local storage IOPS (with NVMe) and up to 1.5x network bandwidth compared to the previous generation Azure Arm-based VMs," Microsoft's launch post states.

Two things to note here.

One is that all the Cobalt-equipped instances use the same 3.4GHz processor, and omit temporary storage. Microsoft of course allows users to add Azure storage, with several types to choose from. But the software giant has not said what storage configuration produced the performance benchmarked above.

The other is that Microsoft hasn't explained what it means by "previous generations of Azure Arm-based VMs." Microsoft's last effort in this field runs Ampere's Altra processor.

Readers may recall that Oracle owns a third of Ampere, and could take control of the chip designer in 2027. Maybe Microsoft wants us to know it's got Big Red's tame chip designer beat without insulting it to its face.

The new VMs are "broadly available" in Azure's Canada Central, Central US, East US 2, East US, Germany West Central, Japan East, Mexico Central, North Europe, Southeast Asia, Sweden Central, Switzerland North, UAE North, West Europe, and West US 2 regions. They're also "coming soon" to the Australia East, Brazil South, France Central, India Central, South Central US, UK South, West US 3, and West US regions. "Soon" means in 2024. ®

Send us news
5 Comments

Jury spares Qualcomm's AI PC ambitions, but Arm eyes a retrial

The victory may be short lived as the chip designer gears up for second round

Jury trial kicks off Arm's wrestling match with Qualcomm

The Nuvia buyer's alleged violations of license terms expected to last through Friday

Even Netflix struggles to identify and understand the cost of its AWS estate

If you have trouble keeping track of your various streaming subscriptions, you're gonna love the irony

AWS now renting monster HPE servers, even in clusters of 7,680-vCPUs and 128TB

Heir to Superdome goes cloudy for those who run large in-memory databases and apps that need them

$800 'AI' robot for kids bites the dust along with its maker

Moxie maker Embodied is going under, teaching important lessons about cloud services

AMD secure VM tech undone by DRAM meddling

Boffins devise BadRAM attack to pilfer secrets from SEV-SNP encrypted memory

Chinese clouds target small and medium enterprises in APAC in search of growth

Smaller buyers see deep discounts and suddenly worry less about regulatory issues

£1B lawsuit targets Microsoft for allegedly overcharging Windows customers on other clouds

Yes, we've been over this before - several times, in fact

AWS says AI could disrupt everything – and hopes it will do just that to Windows

Cloud colossus reckons it can clarify hallucinations, get your apps off Microsoft's OS at pleasing speed

UK government spends another £1B on cloud migration and services

New framework set to help public sector orgs move on amid lock-in fears

Google offered millions to ally itself with trade body fighting Microsoft

El Reg has seen the presentation to CISPE members which sources say was intended to keep the lawsuit over licensing alive

Cloudy with a chance of GPU bills: AI's energy appetite has CIOs sweating

Public cloud expenses have businesses scrambling for alternatives that won't melt the budget