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AMD Makes 3DV Cache a Part of its Long-term Roadmap, Announces Genoa-X and Siena

btarunr

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AMD in its recent interview with TechPowerUp had asserted that 3D Vertical Cache (or 3DV Cache), isn't a one-off technology and that it would be a continual part of its roadmap. In its 2022 Financial Analyst Day presentation, the company confirmed this, by announcing variants of its CPU chiplets that have 3DV Cache, extending to both the upcoming "Zen 4" microarchitecture, and the upcoming "Zen 5," which it unveiled today.

EPYC "Genoa" is codename for the upcoming line of server processors based on the "Zen 4" CPU microarchitecture, with CPU core-counts of up to 96-core/192-thread. These feature the standard "Zen 4" CCD. The company hasn't yet announced the last-level cache (L3 cache) size of the standard "Zen 4" CCD. The company will launch the EPYC "Genoa-X" processor, which much like the EPYC "Milan-X," will incorporate 3DV Cache, with a stacked L3 cache die on top of the chiplet. "Genoa-X" is slated for a 2023 debut.



"Genoa" and "Genoa-X" aren't the only enterprise processors based on "Zen 4," with the company already having announced the EPYC "Bergamo" processor with 128-core/256-thread core-count, meant for cloud-computing environments, based on the "Zen 4c" sub-variant that has certain cloud-relevant capabilities while retaining the full ISA of "Zen 4." There's yet another new processor being announced today, codenamed "Siena."

The EPYC "Siena" processor (named after the Italian city, not the French river), is targeted at the telecommunications and edge-compute industry, and should cash in on the 5G infrastructure market growth. This chip comes with a lean 64-core/128-thread core-config, with an optimized performance/Watt, and possibly I/O best suited for 5G infrastructure. AMD is planning to launch the EPYC "Siena" in 2023.

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If they can get TSMC to make enough for them, what with Intel stealing all the production to spite AMD.
 
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If they can get TSMC to make enough for them, what with Intel stealing all the production to spite AMD.
Intel won't be ready when they say for N3, everything is being delayed as expected. Zen 5 is using N4 first since it will be more mature and refined and then moving to N3, maybe we get Zen 5+. I'm sure AMD will be able to get N3 as they need.
 
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If they can design the 3DVcache to have it's own voltage rail we can officially overclock those CPU's.
 
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If they can design the 3DVcache to have it's own voltage rail we can officially overclock those CPU's.
Why, Zen 4s clocks are so high will a few hundred MHz less be an issue? But if they do OCing I'm sure it will be a good selling point to some.
 
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Why, Zen 4s clocks are so high will a few hundred MHz less be an issue? But if they do OCing I'm sure it will be a good selling point to some.

Current 5800X3D is limited to only 1.35V of core voltage. Since the 3D Cache is hooked onto the core voltage rail itself you cant officially overclock or overvolt the CPU. If they design the chip for it's cache to have it's own voltage rail, you could bypass the 1.35V limitation. Thats the whole point why it was limited in the first place.

There are some experimental bios files out that that allows all that, but you still have a fundamental flaw and that is the Cache running on core voltage rail. If we could seperate that it would be perfect.
 
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