Epyc (original) (raw)

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AMD brand for server microprocessors

Not to be confused with Epic.

Epyc

General information
Launched June 20, 2017; 7 years ago (2017-06-20)
Marketed by AMD
Designed by AMD
Common manufacturers GlobalFoundries (14 nm and 12 nm)TSMC (7 nm and beyond)
Performance
Max. CPU clock rate 2.7 GHz to 5.0 GHz
Architecture and classification
Technology node 14 nm to 3 nm
Microarchitecture Zen microarchitecture:ZenZen 2Zen 3Zen 4Zen 4cZen 5Zen 5c
Instruction set AMD64 (x86-64)
Extensions MMX(+), SSE1, SSE2, SSE3, SSSE3, SSE4a, SSE4.1, SSE4.2, AVX, AVX2, AVX-512 (with Zen 4 and later), FMA3, CVT16/F16C, ABM, BMI1, BMI2, AES, CLMUL, RDRAND, SHA, SME, AMD-V, AMD-Vi
Physical specifications
Cores up to 192 cores/384 threads per socket
Memory (RAM) up to 12 memory channels at 6400 MT/s
Socket AM5SP3SP5SP6
Products, models, variants
Core names NaplesRomeMilanGenoaBergamoSienaRaphaelTurin
History
Predecessor Opteron

Epyc (stylized as EPYC) is a brand of multi-core x86-64 microprocessors designed and sold by AMD, based on the company's Zen microarchitecture. Introduced in June 2017, they are specifically targeted for the server and embedded system markets.[1]

Epyc processors share the same microarchitecture as their regular desktop-grade counterparts, but have enterprise-grade features such as higher core counts, more PCI Express lanes, support for larger amounts of RAM, and larger cache memory. They also support multi-chip and dual-socket system configurations by using the Infinity Fabric interconnect.

AMD Epyc CPU codenames follow the naming scheme of Italian cities, including Milan, Rome, Naples, Genoa, Bergamo, Siena, Turin and Venice.

AMD Epyc CPU generations[17][18][19][20][21]

Gen Year Codename Product line Cores Socket Memory
Server
1st 2017 Naples 7001 series 32 × Zen SP3 (LGA) DDR4
2nd 2019 Rome 7002 series 64 × Zen 2
3rd 2021 Milan 7003 series 64 × Zen 3
2022 Milan-X
4th Genoa 9004 series 96 × Zen 4 SP5 (LGA) DDR5
2023 Genoa-X
Bergamo 128 × Zen 4c
Siena 8004 series 64 × Zen 4c SP6 (LGA)
2024 Raphael 4004 series 16 × Zen 4 AM5 (LGA)
5th 2024 Turin 9005 series 128 × Zen 5 SP5 (LGA)
Turin Dense 192 × Zen 5c
6th 2026 Medusa 10000 series(Ryzen X)[22] Zen 6Zen 6c AM5 (LGA)
Venice SP6 (LGA)
7th 2027 TBA TBA Zen 7Zen 7c AM6 (LGA)SP7 (LGA) DDR6
Embedded
1st 2018 Snowy Owl Embedded 3001 series 16 × Zen SP4 (BGA) DDR4
2019 Naples Embedded 7001 series 32 × Zen SP3 (BGA)
2nd 2021 Rome Embedded 7002 series 64 × Zen 2
3rd 2022 Milan Embedded 7003 series 64 × Zen 3
4th 2023 Genoa Embedded 9004 series 96 × Zen 4 SP5 (BGA) DDR5
Siena Embedded 8004 series 64 × Zen 4c SP6 (BGA)
5th 2025 Turin Embedded 9005 series 128 × Zen 5 SP5 (BGA)
Turin Dense 192 × Zen 5c

A delidded second gen Epyc 7702, showing the die configuration

Epyc CPUs use a multi-chip module design to enable higher yields for a CPU than traditional monolithic dies. First generation Epyc CPUs are composed of four 14 nm compute dies, each with up to 8 cores.[23][24] Cores are symmetrically disabled on dies to create lower binned products with fewer cores but the same I/O and memory footprint. Second and Third gen Epyc CPUs are composed of eight compute dies built on a 7 nm process node, and a large input/output (I/O) die built on a 14 nm process node.[25] Third gen Milan-X CPUs use advanced through-silicon-vias to stack an additional die on top of each of the 8 compute dies, adding 64 MB of L3 cache per die.[26]

Epyc CPUs supports both single socket and dual socket operation. In a dual socket configuration, 64 PCIe lanes from each CPU are allocated to AMD's proprietary Infinity Fabric interconnect to allow for full bandwidth between both CPUs.[27] Thus, a dual socket configuration has the same number of usable PCIe lanes as a single socket configuration. First generation Epyc CPUs had 128 PCIe 3.0 lanes, while second and third generation had 128 PCIe 4.0 lanes. All current Epyc CPUs are equipped with up to eight channels of DDR4 at varying speeds, though next gen Genoa CPUs are confirmed by AMD to support up to twelve channels of DDR5.[7][28]

Unlike Opteron, Intel equivalents and AMD's desktop processors (excluding Socket AM1), Epyc processors are chipset-free - also known as system on a chip. That means most features required to make servers fully functional (such as memory, PCI Express, SATA controllers, etc.) are fully integrated into the processor, eliminating the need for a chipset to be placed on the mainboard. Some features may require the use of additional controller chips to utilize.

A near-infrared photograph of a delidded second gen Epyc 7702. Each CCD has two CCXs

Initial reception to Epyc was generally positive.[28] Epyc was generally found to outperform Intel CPUs in cases where the cores could work independently, such as in high-performance computing and big-data applications. First generation Epyc fell behind in database tasks compared to Intel's Xeon parts due to higher cache latency.[28] In 2021 Meta Platforms selected Epyc chips for its metaverse data centers.[29]

Epyc Genoa was well received, as it offered improved performance and efficiency compared to previous offerings, though received some criticism for not having 2 DIMMs per channel configurations validating, with some reviewers calling it an "incomplete platform".[30]

List of Epyc processors

[edit]

First generation Epyc (Naples)

[edit]

The following table lists the devices using the first generation design.

A "P" suffix denotes support for only a single socket configuration. Non-P models use 64 PCIe lanes from each processor for the communication between processors.

Common features:

Model[i] Cores(threads) Chiplets Coreconfig[ii] Clock rate Cache TDP Release Embeddedoptions[iii]
Base(GHz) Boost (GHz) L2(per core) L3(per CCX) Total Date Price
All–core Max
7251[32][33] 8 (16) 4[31] 8 × 1 2.1 2.9 2.9 512 KiB 4 MiB 36 MiB 120 W Jun 2017[34] $475 Yes
7261[32][35] 2.5 8 MiB 68 MiB 155/170 W Jun 2018[36] $570 Yes
7281[32][33] 16 (32) 8 × 2 2.1 2.7 2.7 4 MiB 40 MiB 155/170 W Jun 2017[34] $650 Yes
7301[32][33] 2.2 8 MiB 72 MiB $800 Yes
7351P[32][33] 2.4 2.9 2.9 $750 735P
7351[32][33] $1,100 Yes
7371[32][37] 3.1 3.6 3.8 200 W Nov 2018[38] $1,550 Yes
7401P[32][33] 24 (48) 8 × 3 2.0 2.8 3.0 8 MiB 76 MiB 155/170 W Jun 2017[34] $1,075 740P
7401[32][33] $1,850 Yes
7451[32][33] 2.3 2.9 3.2 180 W $2,400 Yes
7501[32][33] 32 (64) 8 × 4 2.0 2.6 3.0 8 MiB 80 MiB 155/170 W $3,400 Yes
7551P[32][33] 2.55 180 W $2,100 755P
7551[32][33] $3,400 Yes
7571[39][40] 2.2 3.0 200 W Nov 2018 OEM/AWS --
7601[32][33] 2.7 3.2 180 W Jun 2017[34] $4,200 Yes
  1. ^ Models with "P" suffixes are uniprocessors, only available as single socket configuration.
  2. ^ Core Complexes (CCX) × cores per CCX
  3. ^ Epyc embedded 7001 series models have identical specifications as Epyc 7001 series.

A Epyc 7001 die configuration

A second generation Epyc CPU in an SP3 socket

Second generation Epyc (Rome)

[edit]

First generation Epyc processor

In November 2018, AMD announced Epyc 2 at their Next Horizon event, the second generation of Epyc processors codenamed "Rome" and based on the Zen 2 microarchitecture.[41] The processors feature up to eight 7 nm-based "chiplet" processors with a 14 nm-based IO chip providing 128 PCIe 4.0 lanes in the center interconnected via Infinity Fabric. The processors support up to 8 channels of DDR4 RAM up to 4 TB, and introduce support for PCIe 4.0. These processors have up to 64 cores with 128 SMT threads per socket.[42] The 7 nm "Rome" is manufactured by TSMC.[25] It was released on August 7, 2019.[43] It has 39.5 billion transistors.[44]

In April 2020, AMD launched three new SKUs using Epyc's 7nm Rome platform. The three processors introduced were the eight-core Epyc 7F32, the 16-core 7F52 and the 24-core 7F72, featuring base clocks up to 3.7 GHz (up to 3.9 GHz with boost) within a TDP range of 180 to 240 watts. The launch was supported by Dell EMC, Hewlett Packard Enterprise, Lenovo, Supermicro, and Nutanix.[45]

Common features:

Model Cores(threads) Chiplets Coreconfig[i] Clock rate Cache Socket Scaling TDP Releasedate Releaseprice
Base(GHz) Boost(GHz) L2(per core) L3(per CCX) Total
7232P 8 (16) 2 + IOD 4 × 2 3.1 3.2 512 KiB 8 MiB 36 MiB SP3 1P 120 W Aug 7, 2019 $450
7252 4 × 2 3.1 3.2 16 MiB 68 MiB 2P $475
7262 4 + IOD 8 × 1 3.2 3.4 132 MiB 155 W $575
7F32 8 × 1 3.7 3.9 132 MiB 180 W Apr 14, 2020[46] $2100
7272 12 (24) 2 + IOD 4 × 3 2.9 3.2 16 MiB 70 MiB 2P 120 W Aug 7, 2019 $625
7282 16 (32) 2 + IOD 4 × 4 2.8 3.2 16 MiB 72 MiB 2P 120 W Aug 7, 2019 $650
7302(P) 4 + IOD 8 × 2 3.0 3.3 136 MiB 2P(1P) 155 W 978(978 (978(825)
7F52 8 + IOD 16 × 1 3.5 3.9 264 MiB 2P 240 W Apr 14, 2020[46] $3100
7352 24 (48) 4 + IOD 8 × 3 2.3 3.2 16 MiB 140 MiB 2P 155 W Aug 7, 2019 $1350
7402(P) 2.8 3.35 2P(1P) 180 W 1783(1783 (1783(1250)
7F72 6 + IOD 12 × 2 3.2 3.7 204 MiB 2P 240 W Apr 14, 2020[46] $2450
7452 32 (64) 4 + IOD 8 × 4 2.35 3.35 16 MiB 144 MiB 2P 155 W Aug 7, 2019 $2025
7502(P) 2.5 3.35 2P(1P) 180 W 2600(2600 (2600(2300)
7542 2.9 3.4 2P 225 W $3400
7532 8 + IOD 16 × 2 2.4 3.3 272 MiB 200 W $3350
7552 48 (96) 6 + IOD 12 × 4 2.2 3.3 16 MiB 216 MiB 2P 200 W Aug 7, 2019 $4025
7642 8 + IOD 16 × 3 2.3 3.3 280 MiB 225 W $4775
7662 64 (128) 8 + IOD 16 × 4 2.0 3.3 16 MiB 288 MiB 2P 225 W Aug 7, 2019 $6150
7702(P) 2.0 3.35 2P(1P) 200 W 6450(6450 (6450(4425)
7742 2.25 3.4 2P 225 W $6950
7H12 2.6 3.3 280 W Sep 18, 2019 ---
  1. ^ Core Complexes (CCX) × cores per CCX

The bottom side of an Epyc 7302 mounted in a plastic carrier

Third generation Epyc (Milan)

[edit]

At the HPC-AI Advisory Council in the United Kingdom in October 2019, AMD stated specifications for Milan, Epyc chips based on the Zen 3 microarchitecture.[47] Milan chips will use Socket SP3, with up to 64 cores on package, and support eight-channel DDR4 RAM and 128 PCIe 4.0 lanes.[47] It also announced plans for the subsequent generation of chips, codenamed Genoa, that will be based on the Zen 4 microarchitecture and use Socket SP5.[47]

Milan CPUs were launched by AMD on March 15, 2021.[48]

Milan-X CPUs were launched March 21, 2022.[6] They use 3D V-Cache technology to increase the maximum L3 cache per socket capacity from 256 MB to 768 MB.[49][50][51]

Common features:

Model Cores(threads) Chiplets Coreconfig[i] Clock rate Cache Socket Scaling TDPdefault (range) Releaseprice
Base(GHz) Boost(GHz) L2(per core) L3(per CCX) Total
7203(P) 8 (16) 2 + IOD 2 × 4 2.8 3.4 512 KiB 32 MiB 68 MiB SP3 2P (1P) 120 W (120-150) 348(348 (348(338)
72F3 8 + IOD 8 × 1 3.7 4.1 260 MiB 2P 180 W (165-200) $2468
7303(P) 16 (32) 2 + IOD 2 × 8 2.4 3.4 32 MiB 72 MiB 2P (1P) 130 W (120-150) 604(604 (604(594)
7313(P) 4 + IOD 4 × 4 3.0 3.7 136 MiB 2P (1P) 155 W (155-180) 1083(1083 (1083(913)
7343 3.2 3.9 2P 190 W (165-200) $1565
73F3 8 + IOD 8 × 2 3.5 4.0 264 MiB 240 W (225-240) $3521
7373X 8* + IOD 3.05 3.8 96 MiB 776 MiB 240 W (225-280) $4185
7413 24 (48) 4 + IOD 4 × 6 2.65 3.6 32 MiB 140 MiB 2P 180 W (165-200) $1825
7443(P) 2.85 4.0 2P (1P) 200 W (165-200) 2010(2010 (2010(1337)
74F3 8 + IOD 8 × 3 3.2 4.0 268 MiB 2P 240 W (225-240) $2900
7473X 8* + IOD 2.8 3.7 96 MiB 780 MiB 240 W (225-280) $3900
7453 28 (56) 4 + IOD 4 × 7 2.75 3.45 16 MiB 78 MiB 2P 225 W (225-240) $1570
7513 32 (64) 4 + IOD 4 × 8 2.6 3.65 32 MiB 144 MiB 2P 200 W (165-200) $2840
7543(P) 8 + IOD 8 × 4 2.8 3.7 272 MiB 2P (1P) 225 W (225-240) 3761(3761 (3761(2730)
75F3 2.95 4.0 2P 280 W (225-280) $4860
7573X 8* + IOD 2.8 3.6 96 MiB 784 MiB $5590
7R13[52] 48 (96) 6 + IOD 6 × 8 2.65 3.7 32 MiB 216 MiB TBD TBD OEM/AWS
7643(P) 8 + IOD 8 × 6 2.3 3.6 280 MiB 2P (1P) 225 W (225-240) 4995(4995 (4995(2722)
7663 56 (112) 8 + IOD 8 × 7 2.0 3.5 32 MiB 284 MiB 2P 240 W (225-240) $6366
7663P 1P 240 W (225-280) $3139
7713(P) 64 (128) 8 + IOD 8 × 8 2.0 3.675 32 MiB 288 MiB 2P (1P) 225 W (225-240) 7060(7060 (7060(5010)
7763 2.45 3.4 2P 280 W (225-280) $7890
7773X 8* + IOD 2.2 3.5 96 MiB 800 MiB $8800
  1. ^ Core Complexes (CCX) × cores per CCX

Fourth generation Epyc (Genoa, Bergamo and Siena)

[edit]

On November 10, 2022, AMD launched the fourth generation of Epyc server and data center processors based on the Zen 4 microarchitecture, codenamed Genoa.[53] At their launch event, AMD announced that Microsoft and Google would be some of Genoa's customers.[54] Genoa features between 16 and 96 cores with support for PCIe 5.0 and DDR5. There was also an emphasis by AMD on Genoa's energy efficiency, which according to AMD CEO Lisa Su, means "lower total cost of ownership" for enterprise and cloud datacenter clients.[55] Genoa uses AMD's new SP5 (LGA 6096) socket.[56]

On June 13, 2023, AMD introduced Genoa-X with 3D V-Cache technology for technical computing performance and Bergamo (9734, 9754 and 9754S) for cloud native computing.[57]

On September 18, 2023, AMD introduced the low power Siena lineup of processors, based on the Zen 4c microarchitecture. Siena supports up to 64 cores on the new SP6 socket, which is currently only used by Siena processors. Siena uses the same I/O die as Bergamo, however certain features, such as dual socket support, are removed, and other features are reduced, such as the change from 12 channel memory support to 6 channel memory support.[58]

In May 2024, AMD launched the Raphael lineup of processors, based on the Zen4 microarchitecture. Raphael support up to 16 cores on the AM5 socket.

Model Fab Cores(Threads) Chiplets Coreconfig[i] Clock rate(GHz) Cache (MB) Socket Socket count PCIe 5.0lanes Memory support TDP Releasedate Price(USD)
Base Boost L1 L2 L3 DDR5 ECC
Entry Level (Zen 4 cores)
4124P TSMC N5 4 (8) ? ? 3.8 5.1 0.256 4 16 AM5 1P 24 DDR5-5200 dual-channel 65 W May 21, 2024 $???
4244P 6 (12) 3.8 0.384 6 32
4344P 8 (16) 3.8 5.3 0.5 8 32
4364P 4.5 5.4 32 105 W
4464P 12 (24) 3.7 5.4 0.768 12 64 65 W
4484PX 4.4 5.6 128 120 W
4564P 16 (32) 4.5 5.7 1 16 64 170 W
4584PX 4.2 5.7 128 120 W
Low Power & Edge (Zen 4c cores)
8024P TSMC N5 8 (16) 4 × CCD 1 × I/OD 4 × 2 2.4 3.0 0.5 8 32 SP6 1P 96 DDR5-4800 six-channel 90 W Sep 18, 2023 $409
8024PN 2.05 80 W $525
8124P 16 (32) 4 × 4 2.45 1 16 64 125 W $639
8124PN 2.0 100 W $790
8224P 24 (48) 4 × 6 2.55 1.5 24 160 W $855
8224PN 2.0 120 W $1,015
8324P 32 (64) 4 × 8 2.65 2 32 128 180 W $1,895
8324PN 2.05 130 W $2,125
8434P 48 (96) 4 × 12 2.5 3.1 3 48 200 W $2,700
8434PN 2.0 3.0 155 W $3,150
8534P 64 (128) 4 × 16 2.3 3.1 4 64 200 W $4,950
8534PN 2.0 175 W $5,450
Mainstream Enterprise (Zen 4 cores)
9124 TSMC N5 16 (32) 4 × CCD 1 × I/OD 4 × 4 3.0 3.7 1 16 64 SP5 1P/2P 128 DDR5-4800 twelve-channel 200 W Nov 10, 2022 $1,083
9224 24 (48) 4 × 6 2.5 3.7 1.5 24 200 W $1,825
9254 4 × 6 2.9 4.15 128 220 W $2,299
9334 32 (64) 4 × 8 2.7 3.9 2 32 210 W $2,990
9354 8 × CCD 1 × I/OD 8 × 4 3.25 3.75 256 280 W $3,420
9354P 1P $2,730
Performance Enterprise (Zen 4 cores)
9174F TSMC N5 16 (32) 8 × CCD 1 × I/OD 8 × 2 4.1 4.4 1 16 256 SP5 1P/2P 128 DDR5-4800 twelve-channel 320 W Nov 10, 2022 $3,850
9184X 3.55 4.2 768 Jun 13, 2023 $4,928
9274F 24 (48) 8 × 3 4.05 4.3 1.5 24 256 Nov 10, 2022 $3,060
9374F 32 (64) 8 × 4 3.85 4.3 2 32 $4,860
9384X 3.1 3.9 768 Jun 13, 2023 $5,529
9474F 48 (96) 8 × 6 3.6 4.1 3 48 256 360 W Nov 10, 2022 $6,780
High Performance Computing (Zen 4 cores)
9454 TSMC N5 48 (96) 8 × CCD 1 × I/OD 8 × 6 2.75 3.8 3 48 256 SP5 1P/2P 128 DDR5-4800 twelve-channel 290 W Nov 10, 2022 $5,225
9454P 1P $4,598
9534 64 (128) 8 × 8 2.45 3.7 4 64 1P/2P 280 W $8,803
9554 3.1 3.75 360 W $9,087
9554P 1P $7,104
9634 84 (168) 12 × CCD 1 × I/OD 12 × 7 2.25 3.7 5.25 84 384 1P/2P 290 W $10,304
9654 96 (192) 12 × 8 2.4 3.7 6 96 360 W $11,805
9654P 1P $10,625
9684X 2.55 3.7 1152 1P/2P 400 W Jun 13, 2023 $14,756
Cloud (Zen 4c cores)
9734 TSMC N5 112 (224) 8 × CCD 1 × I/OD 8 × 14 2.2 3.0 7 112 256 SP5 1P/2P 128 DDR5-4800 twelve-channel 340 W Jun 13, 2023 $9,600
9754S 128 (128) 8 × 16 2.25 3.1 8 128 360 W $10,200
9754 128 (256) $11,900
  1. ^ Core Complexes (CCX) × cores per CCX

Fifth generation Epyc (Turin and Turin Dense)

[edit]

The fifth generation of Epyc processors were showcased by AMD at Computex 2024 on June 3. Named the Epyc 9005 series, it will come in two variants:[59]

Both variants are officially referred to under the Turin codename by AMD, although the nickname of "Turin Dense" has also been used to refer to the Zen 5c based CPUs.[60]

Turin Dense support the x2AVIC CPU feature

Both of these processor series will be socket-compatible with the SP5 socket used by Genoa and Bergamo. Epyc 9005 series were launched on October 10, 2024, at AMD's Advancing AI event 2024.[61]

Model Fab Cores(Threads) Chiplets Coreconfig[i] Clock rate(GHz) Cache (MB) Socket Socket count PCIe 5.0lanes Memory support Thermal design power (TDP) Release date Release price (USD)
Base Boost L1 Per Core L2 Per Core L3 Shared
Turin Dense (Zen 5c cores)
9645 TSMC N3E 96 (192) 8 × CCD1 × I/OD 8 × 12 2.3 3.7 80 KB 1 MB 256 MB SP5 1P/2P 128(160 in 2-socket systems) DDR5-6000twelve-channel 320 W 10 Oct, 2024 $11048
9745 128 (256) 8 × 16 2.4 400 W $12141
9825 144 (288) 12 × CCD1 × I/OD 12 × 12 2.2 384 MB 390 W $13006
9845 160 (320) 10 × CCD1 × I/OD 10 × 16 2.1 320 MB 390 W $13564
9965 192 (384) 12 × CCD1 × I/OD 12 × 16 2.25 384 MB 500 W $14813
Turin (Zen 5 cores)
9015 TSMC N4X 8 (16) 2 × CCD1 × I/OD 2 × 4 3.6 4.1 80 KB 1 MB 64 MB SP5 1P/2P 128(160 in 2-socket systems) DDR5-6000twelve-channel 125 W 10 Oct, 2024 $527
9115 16 (32) 2 × 8 2.6 4.1 125 W $726
9135 16 (32) 3.65 4.3 200 W $1214
9175F 16 (32) 16 × CCD1 × I/OD 16 × 1 4.2 5.0 512 MB 320 W $4256
9255 24 (48) 4 × CCD1 × I/OD 4 × 6 3.25 4.3 128 MB 200 W $2495
9275F 24 (48) 8 × CCD1 × I/OD 8 × 3 4.1 4.8 256 MB 320 W $3439
9335 32 (64) 4 × CCD1 × I/OD 4 × 8 3.0 4.4 128 MB 210 W $3178
9355P 32 (64) 8 × CCD1 × I/OD 8 × 4 3.55 4.4 256 MB 1P 128 280 W $2998
9355 32 (64) 3.55 4.4 1P/2P 128(160 in 2-socket systems) 280 W $3694
9375F 32 (64) 3.8 4.8 320 W $5306
9365 36 (72) 6 × CCD1 × I/OD 6 × 6 3.4 4.3 192 MB 300 W $4341
9455P 48 (96) 8 × CCD1 × I/OD 8 × 6 3.15 4.4 256 MB 1P 128 300 W $4819
9455 48 (96) 3.15 4.4 1P/2P 128(160 in 2-socket systems) 300 W $5412
9475F 48 (96) 3.65 4.8 400 W $7592
9535 64 (128) 8 × 8 2.4 4.3 300 W $8992
9555P 64 (128) 3.2 4.4 1P 128 360 W $7983
9555 64 (128) 3.2 4.4 1P/2P 128(160 in 2-socket systems) 360 W $9826
9575F 64 (128) 3.3 5.0 400 W $11791
9565 72 (144) 12 × CCD1 × I/OD 12 × 6 3.15 4.3 384 MB 400 W $10468
9655P 96 (192) 12 × 8 2.5 4.5 1P 128 400 W $10811
9655 96 (192) 2.5 4.5 1P/2P 128 (160 in 2-socket systems) 400 W $11852
9755 128 (256) 16 × CCD1 × I/OD 16 × 8 2.7 4.1 512 MB 500 W $12984
  1. ^ Core Complexes (CCX) × cores per CCX

First generation Epyc (Snowy Owl)

[edit]

In February 2018, AMD also announced the Epyc 3000 series of embedded Zen CPUs.[62]

Common features of EPYC Embedded 3000 series CPUs:

Model Cores(threads) Clock rate (GHz) L3 cache(total) TDP Chiplets Coreconfig[i] Releasedate
Base Boost
All-core Max
3101[63] 4 (4) 2.1 2.9 2.9 8 MB 35 W 1 × CCD 1 × 4 Feb 2018
3151[63] 4 (8) 2.7 16 MB 45 W 2 × 2
3201[63] 8 (8) 1.5 3.1 3.1 30 W 2 × 4
3251[63] 8 (16) 2.5 55 W
3255[64] 25–55 W Dec 2018
3301[63] 12 (12) 2.0 2.15 3.0 32 MB 65 W 2 × CCD 4 × 3 Feb 2018
3351[63] 12 (24) 1.9 2.75 60–80 W
3401[63] 16 (16) 1.85 2.25 85 W 4 × 4
3451[63] 16 (32) 2.15 2.45 80–100 W
  1. ^ Core Complexes (CCX) × cores per CCX

A variant created for the Chinese server market by Hygon Information Technology is the Hygon Dhyana system on a chip.[65][66] It is noted to be a variant of the AMD Epyc, and is so similar that "there is little to no differentiation between the chips".[65] It has been noted that there is "less than 200 lines of new kernel code" for Linux kernel support, and that the Dhyana is "mostly a re-branded Zen CPU for the Chinese server market".[66] Later benchmarks showed that certain floating point instructions are performing worse, probably to comply with US export restrictions.[67] AES and other western cryptography algorithms are replaced by Chinese variants throughout the design.[67]

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