Monday, May 23rd 2016

AMD "Summit Ridge" Die Pictured?

At its 2016 Annual Shareholders Meeting website, AMD reportedly posted a wafer shot of its upcoming 14 nm "Summit Ridge" CPU die. The "Summit Ridge" silicon is rumored to drive a number of performance-thru-enthusiast processor SKUs for AMD. The die pictured features eight CPU cores based on the "Zen" micro-architecture, a dual-channel DDR4 memory controller, 512 KB of L2 cache per core, and 16 MB of shared L3 cache split between two blocks of four CPU cores, each.

"Summit Ridge," much like the "Bristol Ridge" APU silicon, will be a true SoC, in that it integrates the southbridge on the processor die. With "Summit Ridge," AMD is also introducing a new inter-socket interconnect replacing its ageing HyperTransport technology. The new Global Memory Interconnect (GMI) bus provides a 100 GB/s path between two sockets. The "Summit Ridge" die features two such interconnect ports.
Source: SemiAccurate
Add your own comment

56 Comments on AMD "Summit Ridge" Die Pictured?

#51
prtskg
medi01What are those "Orochi" and "Summit"?
Bulldozer cores are called 'Orochi'. Zen cores are Summit Ridge.
bugIf that picture is right, the L3 cache is physically split in two, so its effective size is 8MB.
8MB for 4 cores. 16 for 8 cores.
medi01AMD has revealed that Zen will have double the performance of the FX 8350 and will trade blows with Intel’s eight core i7 5960X Extreme Edition.
wccftech.com/amd-zen-cpu-performance-double-fx-8350/
AMD has said 'Orochi'. It might be the first iteration of Bulldozer cores or Pilerdriver ones like FX 8350. It was wccftech's own idea to use 8350 or 5960X as comparison. AMD has said nothing about them.
Posted on Reply
#52
mastrdrver
AquinusAm I the only person pumped that they're replacing HyperTransport 3.1 with a bus that has twice the bandwidth?
Except there's no basis in the original article for that 100GB/s comment.
Posted on Reply
#53
Caring1
prtskgBulldozer cores are called 'Orochi'. Zen cores are Summit Ridge.
It is my understanding that Summit is the early release, consumer version of Zen, with the performance segment to be named differently and released later, while still falling under the Zen umbrella.
Posted on Reply
#54
Aquinus
Resident Wat-man
mastrdrverExcept there's no basis in the original article for that 100GB/s comment.
Straight from the article, right at the bottom.
GMI has been briefly referenced in patches posted to the Linux kernel’s mailing list by AMD employees. Fudzilla believes that GMI stands for Global Memory Interconnect and that it’s a coherent fabric used for chip to chip communication within the same MCM package capable of up to 100 GB/s using four links.
Posted on Reply
#55
bug
AquinusStraight from the article, right at the bottom.
So the basis is "Fudzilla believes" they can infer the speed of a bus from an acronym?
Posted on Reply
Add your own comment
Dec 19th, 2024 04:46 EST change timezone

New Forum Posts

Popular Reviews

Controversial News Posts