It looks like the cache die has the same surface area as the L3 cache that's part of the CCD, but twice the megabytes. How is that possible?
What makes you think it's a rock and not a cut and polished part of a HBM stack?
it look like they can stack multiple layer, so it's possible this 64 MB is 2 layer of 32 MB. But it's also quite possible that it's just denser memory and it spread a bit on the cores space. The 32 MB use quite a bit of the central space but not all of it.
If you look at only the SRAM, it's only a portion of the actual space, maybe they reuse the same L3 control and tags.
I suspect the SRAM top top spread over the L2 cache of each core too.
As per Andreas Schilling on Twitter that spoke with AMD.
- Zen 3 was made with that in mind. No modification needed.
- it's 1 layer of 64 MB of cache
- It actually expend the level 3 cache. With minimal latency increase.
Based on that and the picture above I suspect the 64 MB is way denser than the 32 MB bellow. I suspect the L3 control and L3 tags support also the SRAM in the the V Cache.