Skylake (microarchitecture)
It has been suggested that this article should besplitinto articles titledSkylake (microprocessor)andSkylake (microarchitecture).(discuss)(April 2021) |
General information | |
---|---|
Launched | August 5, 2015 |
Discontinued | March 4, 2019 | (desktop processors)
Marketed by | Intel |
Designed by | Intel |
Common manufacturer |
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CPUIDcode | 0406e3h, 0506e3h |
Product code |
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Performance | |
Max.CPUclock rate | Up to 5.0 GHz |
Cache | |
L1cache | 64KB per core (32 KB instructions + 32 KB data) |
L2 cache | 256KB per core (1MB per core for Skylake-X, SP, and W) |
L3 cache | Up to 38.5MB shared |
L4 cache | 128MB ofeDRAM(on Iris Pro models) |
Architecture and classification | |
Technology node | 14 nmbulk silicon 3D transistors (Tri-Gate) |
Microarchitecture | Skylake |
Instruction set | x86-16,IA-32,x86-64 |
Extensions | |
Physical specifications | |
Cores |
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Sockets | |
Products, models, variants | |
Product code name |
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Brand name |
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History | |
Predecessor | Broadwell(tick/process) |
Successors |
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Support status | |
Client: Unsupported as of December 30, 2022 for iGPU Xeon E3 v5: Unsupported as of December 30, 2022 for iGPU Other Xeon: supported |
Skylake[6][7]isIntel's codenamefor its sixth generationCoremicroprocessorfamily that was launched on August 5, 2015,[8]succeeding theBroadwellmicroarchitecture.[9]Skylake is a microarchitecture redesign using the same14 nmmanufacturing process technology[10]as its predecessor, serving as a tock in Intel'stick–tockmanufacturing and design model. According to Intel, the redesign brings greater CPU andGPUperformance and reduced power consumption. Skylake CPUs share their microarchitecture withKaby Lake,Coffee Lake,Whiskey Lake,andComet LakeCPUs.
Skylake is the last Intel platform on which Windows earlier thanWindows 10are officially supported byMicrosoft,[11]although enthusiast-createdmodificationsare available that disabled theWindows Updatecheck and allowedWindows 8.1and earlier to continue to receiveWindows Updateson this and later platforms.[12][13][14]
Some of the processors based on the Skylake microarchitecture are marketed as sixth-generation Core.[15][16][17]
Intel officially declared end of life and discontinued Skylake LGA 1151 CPUs (except Xeon E3 v5) on March 4, 2019.[18]
Development history
[edit]Skylake's development, as with previous processors such asBanias,Dothan,Conroe,Sandy Bridge,andIvy Bridge,was primarily undertaken by Intel Israel at its engineering research center inHaifa, Israel.[19]The final design was largely an evolution ofHaswell,with minor improvements to performance and several power-saving features being added.[20]A major priority of Skylake's design was to design a microarchitecture for envelopes as low as 4.5W to embed withintablet computersandnotebooksin addition to higher-powerdesktop computersandservers.[21]
In September 2014, Intel announced the Skylake microarchitecture at theIntel Developer ForuminSan Francisco,and that volume shipments of Skylake CPUs were scheduled for the second half of 2015. The Skylake development platform was announced to be available in Q1 2015. During the announcement, Intel also demonstrated two computers with desktop and mobile Skylake prototypes: the first was a desktoptestbedsystem, running the latest version of3DMark,while the second computer was a fully functional laptop, playing4Kvideo.[22]
An initial batch of Skylake CPU models (i5-6600K and i7-6700K) was announced for immediate availability during theGamescomon August 5, 2015,[23]unusually soon after the release of its predecessor, Broadwell, which had suffered from launch delays.[24]Intel acknowledged in 2014 that moving from 22 nm (Haswell) to 14 nm (Broadwell) had been its most difficult process to develop yet, causing Broadwell's planned launch to slip by several months;[25]yet, the 14 nm production was back on track and in full production as of Q3 2014.[26]Industry observers had initially believed that the issues affecting Broadwell would also cause Skylake to slip to 2016, but Intel was able to bring forward Skylake's release and shorten Broadwell's release cycle instead.[27][28]As a result, the Broadwell architecture had an unusually short run.[27]
Overclocking of unsupported processors
[edit]Officially Intel supportedoverclockingof only the K and X versions of Skylake processors. However, it was later discovered that other non-K chips could be overclocked by modifying the base clock value – a process made feasible by the base clock applying only to the CPU, RAM, and integrated graphics on Skylake. Through beta UEFI firmware updates, some motherboard vendors, such asASRock(which prominently promoted it under the name Sky OC) allowed the base clock to be modified in this manner.[29][30]
When overclocking unsupported processors using these UEFI firmware updates, several issues arise:
- C-states are disabled, therefore the CPU will constantly run at its highest frequency and voltage
- Turbo-boost is disabled
- Integrated graphics are disabled
- AVX2instruction performance is poor, approximately 4-5 times slower due to the upper 128-bit half of the execution units and data buses not being taken out of their power saving states
- CPU core temperature readings are incorrect
These issues are partly caused by the power management of the processor needing to be disabled for base clock overclocking to work.[31]
In February 2016, however, an ASRock firmware update removed the feature. On February 9, 2016, Intel announced that it would no longer allow such overclocking of non-K processors, and that it had issued a CPUmicrocodeupdate that removes the function.[32][33][34]In April 2016, ASRock started selling motherboards that allow overclocking of unsupported CPUs using an external clock generator.[35][36]
Operating system support
[edit]In January 2016, Microsoft announced that it would end support ofWindows 7andWindows 8.1on Skylake processors effective July 17, 2017; after this date, only the most critical updates for the two operating systems would be released for Skylake users if they have been judged not to affect the reliability of the OS on older hardware (until July 31, 2019; August 2019 critical update requires at leastWindows 10), and Windows 10 would be the onlyMicrosoft Windowsplatform officially supported on Skylake and on later Intel CPU microarchitectures beginning with Skylake's successorKaby Lake.Terry Myersonstated that Microsoft had to make a large investment in order to reliably support Skylake on older versions of Windows, and that future generations of processors would require further investments. Microsoft also stated that due to the age of the platform, it would be challenging for newer hardware, firmware, and device driver combinations to properly run under Windows 7.[37][38]
On March 18, 2016, in response to criticism over the move, primarily from enterprise customers, Microsoft announced revisions to the support policy, changing the cutoff for support and non-critical updates to July 17, 2018, and stating that Skylake users would receive all critical security updates for Windows 7 and 8.1 through the end of extended support.[39][40]In August 2016, citing "a strong partnership with our OEM partners and Intel", Microsoft stated that it would continue to fully support 7 and 8.1 on Skylake through the end of their respective lifecycles.[41][42]In addition, an enthusiast-createdmodificationwas released that disabled theWindows Updatecheck and allowed Windows 8.1 and earlier to continue to be updated on this and later platforms.[43]
As of Linux kernel 4.10, Skylake mobile power management is supported with most Package C states supported seeing some use. Linux 4.11 enables Frame-Buffer Compression for the integrated graphics chipset by default, which lowers power consumption.[44]
Skylake is fully supported onOpenBSD6.2 and later, includingacceleratedgraphics.[45]
ForWindows 11,only the high-end Skylake-X processors are officially listed as compatible.[46]All other Skylake processors are not officially supported due to security concerns.[47]However, it is still possible to manually upgrade using an ISO image (as Windows 10 users on those processors will not be offered to upgrade to Windows 11 via Windows Update), or perform a clean installation as long as the system hasTrusted Platform Module(TPM) 2.0 enabled,[48]but the user must accept that they will not be entitled to receive updates, and that damage caused by using Windows 11 on an unsupported configuration are not covered by the manufacturer's warranty.[49][50]
Features
[edit]Like its predecessor,Broadwell,Skylake is available in five variants, identified by thesuffixesS (SKL-S), X (SKL-X), H (SKL-H), U (SKL-U), and Y (SKL-Y). SKL-S and SKL-X containoverclockableK and X variants withunlocked multipliers.[51]The H, U and Y variants are manufactured inball grid array(BGA) packaging, while the S and X variants are manufactured inland grid array(LGA) packaging using a new socket,LGA 1151(LGA 2066for Skylake X).[52]Skylake is used in conjunction withIntel 100 Series chipsets,also known asSunrise Point.[53]
The major changes between the Haswell and Skylake architectures include the removal of thefully integrated voltage regulator(FIVR) introduced with Haswell.[54]On the variants that will use a discretePlatform Controller Hub(PCH),Direct Media Interface(DMI) 2.0 is replaced byDMI 3.0,which allows speeds of up to 8GT/s.
Skylake's U and Y variants support oneDIMMslot per channel, while H and S variants support two DIMM slots per channel.[52]Skylake's launch and sales lifespan occur at the same time as the ongoingSDRAMmarket transition, withDDR3 SDRAMmemory gradually being replaced byDDR4 SDRAM.Rather than working exclusively with DDR4, the Skylake microarchitecture remainsbackward compatibleby interoperating with both types of memory. Accompanying the microarchitecture's support for both memory standards, a new SO-DIMM type capable of carrying either DDR3 or DDR4 memory chips, calledUniDIMM,was also announced.[55]
Skylake's few P variants have a reduced on-die graphics unit (12 execution units enabled instead of 24 execution units) over their direct counterparts; see the table below. In contrast, with Ivy Bridge CPUs the P suffix was used for CPUs with completely disabled on-die video chipset.
Other enhancements includeThunderbolt 3.0,Serial ATA Express,Iris Prographics withDirect3D feature level12_1 with up to 128 MB of L4eDRAMcache on certain SKUs.[56]The Skylake line of processors retiresVGAsupport,[57]while supporting up to three monitors connected via HDMI 1.4, DisplayPort 1.2 or Embedded DisplayPort (eDP) interfaces.[58]HDMI 2.0 (4K@60 Hz) is only supported on motherboards equipped with Intel's Alpine Ridge Thunderbolt controller.[59]
The Skylake instruction set changes includeIntel MPX(Memory Protection Extensions) andIntel SGX(Software Guard Extensions). Future Xeon variants will also haveAdvanced Vector Extensions3.2 (AVX-512F).[3][4]
Skylake-based laptops were predicted to use wireless technology calledRezencefor charging, and other wireless technologies for communication with peripherals. Many major PC vendors agreed to use this technology in Skylake-based laptops; however, no laptops were released with the technology as of 2019.[60][61]
The integrated GPU of Skylake's S variant supports on WindowsDirectX12 Feature Level 12_1,OpenGL4.6 with latest Windows 10 driver update[62](OpenGL 4.5 on Linux[63]) andOpenCL3.0 standards. TheQuick Syncvideo engine now includes support forVP9(GPU accelerated decode only),VP8andHEVC(hardware accelerated 8-bit encode/decode and GPU accelerated 10-bit decode), and supports for resolutions up to 4096 × 2048.[64][65][66]
Intel also released unlocked (capable of overclocking) mobile Skylake CPUs.[67]
Unlike previous generations, Skylake-based Xeon E3 no longer works with a desktop chipset that supports the same socket, and requires either the C232 or the C236 chipset to operate.
Started from Skylake, Intel had removed IDE mode (of SATA controller) and EHCI controller from its client platform chipsets.
Known issues
[edit]Short loops with a specific combination of instruction use may cause unpredictable system behavior on CPUs with hyperthreading. Amicrocodeupdate was issued to fix the issue.[68]
Skylake is vulnerable toSpectreattacks.[69] In fact, it is more vulnerable than other processors because it uses indirect branch speculation not just on indirect branches but also when the return prediction stack underflows.
The latency for thespinlockPAUSE
instruction has been increased dramatically (from the usual 10 cycles to 141 cycles in Skylake), which can cause performance issues with older programs or libraries using pause instructions.[70]Intel documents the increased latency as a feature that improves power efficiency.[71]
CPU
[edit]- Improved front-end, deeper out-of-order buffers, improvedexecution units,more execution units (third vector integerALU(VALU)) for five ALUs in total, more load/storebandwidth,improvedhyper-threading(wider retirement), speedup of AES-GCM and AES-CBC by 17% and 33% accordingly.[72][73]
- Up to four cores as the default mainstream configuration[74]and up to 18 cores for X-series
- AVX-512:F, CD, VL, BW, and DQ for Xeon Scalable and W variants, but not Xeon E3[3]
- Intel Memory Protection Extensions(MPX)
- IntelSoftware Guard Extensions(SGX)
- Intel Speed Shift[75]
- Largerre-order buffer(224 entries, up from 192)
- L1 cachesize unchanged at 32KBinstruction and 32 KB data cache per core.
- L2 cachewas changed from 8-way to 4-way set associative[76]
- Voltage regulator module (FIVR) is moved back to the motherboard
- Enhancements of Intel Processor Trace: fine-grained timing through CYC packets (cycle-accurate mode) and support forInstruction Pointer(IP) address filtering.[77]
- 64 to 128 MB L4eDRAMcache on certain SKUs
GPU
[edit]- Skylake's integratedGen9 GPUsupports Direct3D 12 at thefeature level 12_1[6][78][79]
- Full fixed functionHEVCMain/8bit encoding/decoding acceleration. Hybrid/Partial HEVC Main10/10bit decoding acceleration.JPEGencoding acceleration for resolutions up to 16,000×16,000 pixels. PartialVP9encoding/decoding acceleration.[80]
I/O
[edit]- LGA 1151socket for mainstream desktop processors andLGA 2066socket for enthusiast gaming/workstation X-series processors
- 100-series chipset (Sunrise Point)[81]
- X-series uses X299-series chipset
- DMI 3.0(FromDMI 2.0)
- Support for bothDDR3LSDRAM andDDR4 SDRAMin mainstream variants, using customUniDIMMSO-DIMM form factor[74][82][83]with up to 64GBofRAMonLGA 1151variants. UsualDDR3memory is also supported by certain motherboard vendors even though Intel does not officially support it.[84][85]
- Support for 16PCI Express3.0 lanes from CPU, 20PCI Express3.0 lanes from PCH (LGA 1151), 44PCI Express3.0 lanes for Skylake-X
- Support forThunderbolt 3(Alpine Ridge)[86]
Other
[edit]- Thermal design power(TDP) up to 95 W (LGA 1151); up to 165 W (LGA 2066)[87]
- 14 nmmanufacturing process[88]
Configurations
[edit]Skylake processors are produced in seven main families: Y, U, H, S, X, W, and SP. Multiple configurations are available within each family:[52]
Feature | Family | |||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Y | U | H | T | S | R | X | W | SP | ||
Max cores | 2 | 4 | 18 | 28 | ||||||
Integrated L4cache(eDRAM) | • | • | • | |||||||
Low-powermobile/embedded systems | • | • | • | • | ||||||
Socket | BGA | LGA 1151 | LGA 2066 | LGA 3647 | ||||||
LPDDR3 SDRAM | • | • | • | |||||||
DDR3L SDRAM | • | • | • | • | • | • | ||||
DDR4 SDRAM | • | • | • | • | • | • | • | |||
128GBto 1.5TBof physical RAM | • | • | •+ | |||||||
28 to 44 PCIe 3.0 lanes | • | • | • |
List of Skylake processor models
[edit]Mainstream desktop processors
[edit]Common features of the mainstream desktop Skylake CPUs:
- DMI 3.0andPCIe 3.0interfaces
- Dual-channel memory support in the following configurations: DDR3L-1600 1.35 V (32 GB maximum) or DDR4-2133 1.2 V (64 GB maximum). DDR3 is unofficially supported through some motherboard vendors[89][90][91]
- 16PCIe 3.0lanes
- The Core-branded processors support the AVX2 instruction set. The Celeron and Pentium-branded ones support only SSE4.1/4.2
- 350 MHz base graphics clock rate
Processor branding and model |
Cores (threads) |
Clock rate(GHz) | GPU | Cache | TDP | Socket | Release date |
Release price (USD) | ||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Base | Turbo Boost2.0 | Model | EUs | Max freq. (GHz) |
L2 | L3 | L4 (eDRAM) | |||||||||
1 | 2[citation needed] | 4[citation needed] | ||||||||||||||
Core i7 | 6700K | 4 (8) | 4.0 | 4.2 | 4.0 | 4.0 | HD 530 | 24 | 1.15[92] | 1MB | 8MB | — | 91W | LGA 1151 | August 5, 2015 | $339 |
6785R | 3.3 | 3.9 | 3.8 | 3.5 | Iris Pro 580 | 72 | 128MB | 65W | BGA 1440 | May 3, 2016 | $370 | |||||
6700 | 3.4 | 4.0 | 3.9 | 3.7 | HD 530 | 24 | — | LGA 1151 | September 1, 2015 | $303 | ||||||
6700T | 2.8 | 3.6 | 3.5 | 3.4 | 35W | $303 | ||||||||||
Core i5 | 6600K | 4 (4) | 3.5 | 3.9 | 3.8 | 3.6 | 6MB | 91W | August 5, 2015 | $242 | ||||||
6685R | 3.2 | 3.8 | 3.7 | 3.3 | Iris Pro 580 | 72 | 128MB | 65W | BGA 1440 | May 3, 2016 | $288 | |||||
6600 | 3.3 | 3.9 | 3.8 | 3.6 | HD 530 | 24 | — | LGA 1151 | September 1, 2015 | $213 | ||||||
6585R | 2.8 | 3.6 | 3.5 | 3.1 | Iris Pro 580 | 72 | 1.1 | 128MB | BGA 1440 | May 3, 2016 | $255 | |||||
6500 | 3.2 | 3.3 | HD 530 | 24 | 1.05 | — | LGA 1151 | September 1, 2015 | $192 | |||||||
6600T | 2.7 | 3.5 | 3.4 | 3.3 | 1.1 | 35W | Q3 2015 | $213 | ||||||||
6500T | 2.5 | 3.1 | 3.0 | 2.8 | $192 | |||||||||||
6402P | 2.8 | 3.4 | 3.4 | 3.2 | HD 510 | 12 | 0.95 | 65W | December 27, 2015 | $182 | ||||||
6400T | 2.2 | 2.8 | 2.7 | 2.5 | HD 530 | 24 | 35W | Q3 2015 | ||||||||
6400 | 2.7 | 3.3 | 3.3 | 3.1 | 65W | August 5, 2015 | ||||||||||
Core i3 | 6320 | 2 (4) | 3.9 | — | 1.15 | 512KB | 4MB | 51W | Q3 2015 | $149 | ||||||
6300 | 3.8 | $138 | ||||||||||||||
6100 | 3.7 | 1.05 | 3MB | October 2015 | $117 | |||||||||||
6300T | 3.3 | 0.95 | 4MB | 35W | $138 | |||||||||||
6100T | 3.2 | 3MB | $117 | |||||||||||||
6098P | 3.6 | HD 510 | 12 | 1.050 | 54W | December 27, 2015 | ||||||||||
Pentium | G4520 | 2 (2) | 3.6 | HD 530 | 24 | 51W | October 2015 | $86 | ||||||||
G4500 | 3.5 | $75 | ||||||||||||||
G4500T | 3.0 | 0.95 | 35W | Q3 2015 | ||||||||||||
G4400 | 3.3 | HD 510 | 12 | 1.0 | 54W | October 2015 | $64 | |||||||||
G4400T | 2.9 | 0.95 | 35W | Q3 2015 | ||||||||||||
G4400TE | 2.4 | Q4 2015 | $70 | |||||||||||||
Celeron | G3920 | 2.9 | 2MB | 51W | $52 | |||||||||||
G3900 | 2.8 | $42 | ||||||||||||||
G3900TE | 2.3 | 35W | ||||||||||||||
G3900T | 2.6 |
High-end desktop processors (Skylake-X)
[edit]Common features of the high-performance Skylake-X CPUs:
- In addition to the AVX2 instruction set, they also support theAVX-512instructions
- No built-in iGPU (integrated graphics processor)
- Turbo Boost Max Technology 3.0 for up to two/four threads workloads for CPUs that have eight cores and more (7820X, 7900X, 7920X, 7940X, 7960X, 7980XE, and all ninth generation chips)[93]
- A different cache hierarchy (when compared to client Skylake CPUs or previous architectures)
Processor branding and model |
Cores (threads) |
Clock rate(GHz) | Cache | PCIe lanes |
Memory support |
Socket | TDP | Release date |
Release price (USD) | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Base | Turbo | L2 | L3 | ||||||||||
2.0 | 3.0 | ||||||||||||
Core i9[94] | 7980XE | 18 (36) | 2.6 | 4.2 | 4.4 | 18MB | 24.75MB | 44 PCIe 3.0 |
DDR4-2666 quad-channel |
LGA 2066 | 165W | Sep 25, 2017[95] | $1999 |
7960X | 16 (32) | 2.8 | 16MB | 22MB | $1699 | ||||||||
7940X | 14 (28) | 3.1 | 4.3 | 14MB | 19.25MB | $1399 | |||||||
7920X | 12 (24) | 2.9 | 12MB | 16.5MB | 140W | Aug 28, 2017 | $1189 | ||||||
7900X | 10 (20) | 3.3 | 4.5 | 10MB | 13.75MB | Jun 19, 2017 | $999 | ||||||
Core i7 | 7820X | 8 (16) | 3.6 | 8MB | 11MB | 28 PCIe 3.0 |
$599 | ||||||
7800X | 6 (12) | 3.5 | 4.0 | — | 6MB | 8.25MB | DDR4-2400 quad-channel |
$389 |
Processor branding and model |
Cores (threads) |
Clock rate(GHz) | Cache | PCIe lanes |
Memory support |
Socket | TDP | Release date |
Release price (USD) | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Base | Turbo Boost | L2 | L3 | ||||||||||
2.0 | 3.0 | ||||||||||||
Core i9[96] | 9990XE[97] | 14 (28) | 4.0 | 5.0 | 5.0 | 14MB | 19.25MB | 44 PCIe 3.0 |
DDR4-2666 quad-channel |
LGA 2066 | 255W | Jan 3, 2019 | OEM |
9980XE | 18 (36) | 3.0 | 4.4 | 4.5 | 18MB | 24.75MB | 165W | Oct 9, 2018[98] | $1979 | ||||
9960X | 16 (32) | 3.1 | 16MB | 22MB | $1684 | ||||||||
9940X | 14 (28) | 3.3 | 14MB | 19.25MB | $1387 | ||||||||
9920X | 12 (24) | 3.5 | 12MB | $1189 | |||||||||
9900X | 10 (20) | 3.5 | 10MB | $989 | |||||||||
9820X | 3.3 | 4.1 | 4.2 | 16.5MB | $889 | ||||||||
Core i7 | 9800X | 8 (16) | 3.8 | 4.4 | 4.5 | 8MB | $589 |
Xeon high-end desktop processors (Skylake-X)
[edit]- Marketed as a Xeon
- Uses the C621 chipset
- Xeon W-3175X was the only Xeon with a multiplier officially unlocked foroverclockinguntil the introduction ofSapphire Rapids-WSXeon CPUs in 2023.[99]
Model | sSpec number |
Cores (threads) |
Clock rate | Turbo Boost all-core/2.0 (/max. 3.0) |
L2 cache |
L3 cache |
TDP | Socket | I/O bus | Memory | Release date | Part number(s) |
Release price (USD) |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Xeon W-3175X |
|
28 (56) | 3.1 GHz | 3.8/4.3 GHz | 28 × 1 MB | 38.50 MB | 255 W
|
LGA 3647 | DMI 3.0 | 6 × DDR4-2666 | January 30, 2019 |
|
$2999 |
Mobile processors
[edit]For mobile workstation processors, seeServer processors
Processor branding and model |
Cores (threads) |
CPU clock rate |
CPUTurboclock rate | GPU | GPU clock rate | Cache | Max. PCIe lanes |
TDP | cTDP | Release date | Price (USD) | ||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Single core |
Dual core[citation needed] |
Quad core[citation needed] |
Base | Turbo | L3 | L4 (eDRAM) |
Up | Down | |||||||||
Core i7 | 6970HQ | 4 (8) | 2.8 GHz | 3.7 GHz | ? | Iris Pro 580 | 350 MHz | 1050 MHz | 8 MB | 128 MB | 16 | 45 W | — | 35 W | Q1 2016 | $623 | |
6920HQ | 2.9 GHz | 3.8 GHz | 3.6 GHz | 3.4 GHz | HD 530 | — | September 1, 2015 | $568 | |||||||||
6870HQ | 2.7 GHz | 3.6 GHz | ? | Iris Pro 580 | 1000 MHz | 128 MB | Q1 2016 | $434 | |||||||||
6820HQ | 3.4 GHz | 3.2 GHz | HD 530 | 1050 MHz | — | September 1, 2015 | $378 | ||||||||||
6820HK | |||||||||||||||||
6770HQ | 2.6 GHz | 3.5 GHz | ? | Iris Pro 580 | 950 MHz | 6 MB | 128 MB | Q1 2016 | $434 | ||||||||
6700HQ | 3.3 GHz | 3.1 GHz | HD 530 | 1050 MHz | — | September 1, 2015 | $378 | ||||||||||
6660U | 2 (4) | 2.4 GHz | 3.4 GHz | 3.2 GHz | — | Iris 540 | 300 MHz | 4 MB | 64 MB | 12 | 15 W | 9.5 W | Q1 2016 | $415 | |||
6650U | 2.2 GHz | Q3 2015 | |||||||||||||||
6600U | 2.6 GHz | — | HD 520 | — | 25 W | 7.5 W | September 1, 2015 | $393 | |||||||||
6567U | 3.3 GHz | 3.6 GHz | 3.4 GHz | Iris 550 | 1100 MHz | 64 MB | 28 W | — | 23 W | Q3 2015 | TBD | ||||||
6560U | 2.2 GHz | 3.2 GHz | 3.1 GHz | Iris 540 | 1050 MHz | 15 W | 9.5 W | ||||||||||
6500U | 2.5 GHz | 3.1 GHz | 3.0 GHz | HD 520 | — | 7.5 W | September 1, 2015 | $393 | |||||||||
Core i5 | 6440HQ | 4 (4) | 2.6 GHz | 3.5 GHz | 3.3 GHz | 3.1 GHz | HD 530 | 350 MHz | 950 MHz | 6 MB | 16 | 45 W | 35 W | $250 | |||
6360U | 2 (4) | 2.0 GHz | 3.1 GHz | 2.9 GHz | — | Iris 540 | 300 MHz | 1000 MHz | 4 MB | 64 MB | 12 | 15 W | 9.5 W | Q3 2015 | $304 | ||
6350HQ | 4 (4) | 2.3 GHz | 3.2 GHz | ? | Iris Pro 580 | 350 MHz | 900 MHz | 6 MB | 128 MB | 16 | 45 W | 35 W | Q1 2016 | $306 | |||
6300HQ | 3.0 GHz | 2.8 GHz | HD 530 | 950 MHz | — | September 1, 2015 | $250 | ||||||||||
6300U | 2 (4) | 2.4 GHz | 3.0 GHz | 2.9 GHz | — | HD 520 | 300 MHz | 1000 MHz | 3 MB | 12 | 15 W | 7.5 W | $281 | ||||
6287U | 3.1 GHz | 3.5 GHz | 3.3 GHz | Iris 550 | 1100 MHz | 4 MB | 64 MB | 28 W | 23 W | Q3 2015 | $304 | ||||||
6267U | 2.9 GHz | 3.3 GHz | 3.1 GHz | 1050 MHz | 23 W | ||||||||||||
6260U | 1.8 GHz | 2.9 GHz | 2.7 GHz | Iris 540 | 950 MHz | 15 W | 9.5 W | $304 | |||||||||
6200U | 2.3 GHz | 2.8 GHz | HD 520 | 1000 MHz | 3 MB | — | 7.5 W | September 1, 2015 | $281 | ||||||||
Core i3 | 6167U | 2.7 GHz | — | — | Iris 550 | 64 MB | 28 W | 23 W | Q3 2015 | $304 | |||||||
6157U | 2.4 GHz | Q3 2016 | |||||||||||||||
6100H | 2.7 GHz | HD 530 | 350 MHz | 900 MHz | — | 35 W | — | September 1, 2015 | $225 | ||||||||
6100U | 2.3 GHz | HD 520 | 300 MHz | 1000 MHz | 15 W | 7.5 W | $281 | ||||||||||
6006U | 2.0 GHz | 900 MHz | — | November, 2016 | $281 | ||||||||||||
Core m7 | 6Y75 | 1.2 GHz | 3.1 GHz | 2.9 GHz | HD 515 | 300 MHz | 1000 MHz | 4 MB | 10 | 4.5 W | 7 W | 3.5 W | September 1, 2015 | $393 | |||
Core m5 | 6Y57 | 1.1 GHz | 2.8 GHz | 2.4 GHz | 900 MHz | $281 | |||||||||||
6Y54 | 2.7 GHz | ||||||||||||||||
Core m3 | 6Y30 | 0.9 GHz | 2.2 GHz | 2.0 GHz | 850 MHz | 3.8 W | |||||||||||
Pentium | 4405U | 2.1 GHz | — | — | HD 510 | 950 MHz | 2 MB | 15 W | — | 10 W | Q3 2015 | $161 | |||||
4405Y | 1.5 GHz | HD 515 | 800 MHz | 6 W | 4.5 W | ||||||||||||
Celeron | G3902E | 2 (2) | 1.6 GHz | — | HD 510 | 350 MHz | 950 MHz | 16 | 25 W | — | Q1 2016 | $107 | |||||
G3900E | 2.4 GHz | 35 W | |||||||||||||||
3955U | 2.0 GHz | 300 MHz | 900 MHz | 10 | 15 W | 10 W | Q4 2015 | ||||||||||
3855U | 1.6 GHz |
Workstation processors
[edit]- All models support:MMX,SSE,SSE2,SSE3,SSSE3,SSE4.1,SSE4.2,AVX,AVX2,AVX-512,FMA3,MPX,Enhanced IntelSpeedStepTechnology (EIST),Intel 64,XD bit (anNX bitimplementation),Intel VT-x,Intel VT-d,Turbo Boost(excluding W-2102 and W-2104),Hyper-threading(excluding W-2102 and W-2104),AES-NI,Intel TSX-NI,Smart Cache.
- PCI Express lanes: 48
- Supports up to eight DIMMs of DDR4 memory, maximum 512 GB.
Model | sSpec number |
Cores (threads) |
Clock rate | Turbo Boost all-core/2.0 (/max. 3.0) |
L2 cache |
L3 cache |
TDP | Socket | I/O bus | Memory | Release date | Part number(s) |
Release price (USD) |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Xeon W-2195 |
|
18 (36) | 2.3 GHz | 3.2/4.3 GHz | 18 × 1 MB | 24.75 MB | 140 W
|
LGA 2066 | DMI 3.0 | 4 × DDR4-2666 | August 29, 2017 |
|
$2553 |
Xeon W-2191B |
|
18 (36) | 2.3 GHz | 3.2/4.3 GHz | 18 × 1 MB | 24.75 MB | 140 W
|
LGA 2066 | DMI 3.0 | 4 × DDR4-2666 | December 21, 2017 | OEM for Apple[100][101] | |
Xeon W-2175 |
|
14 (28) | 2.5 GHz | 3.3/4.3 GHz | 14 × 1 MB | 19.25 MB | 140 W
|
LGA 2066 | DMI 3.0 | 4 × DDR4-2666 | October 15, 2017 |
|
$1947 |
Xeon W-2170B |
|
14 (28) | 2.5 GHz | 3.3/4.3 GHz | 14 × 1 MB | 19.25 MB | 140 W
|
LGA 2066 | DMI 3.0 | 4 × DDR4-2666 | December 21, 2017 | OEM for Apple[100][101] | |
Xeon W-2155 |
|
10 (20) | 3.3 GHz | 4.0/4.5 GHz | 10 × 1 MB | 13.75 MB | 140 W
|
LGA 2066 | DMI 3.0 | 4 × DDR4-2666 | August 29, 2017 |
|
$1440 |
Xeon W-2150B |
|
10 (20) | 3 GHz | 4.0/4.5 GHz | 10 × 1 MB | 13.75 MB | 120 W
|
LGA 2066 | DMI 3.0 | 4 × DDR4-2666 | December 21, 2017 | OEM for Apple[100][101] | |
Xeon W-2145 |
|
8 (16) | 3.7 GHz | 4.3/4.5 GHz | 8 × 1 MB | 11.00 MB | 140 W
|
LGA 2066 | DMI 3.0 | 4 × DDR4-2666 | August 29, 2017 |
|
$1113 |
Xeon W-2140B |
|
8 (16) | 3.2 GHz | 3.9/4.2 GHz | 8 × 1 MB | 11.00 MB | 120 W
|
LGA 2066 | DMI 3.0 | 4 × DDR4-2666 | December 21, 2017 | OEM for Apple[100][101] | |
Xeon W-2135 |
|
6 (12) | 3.7 GHz | 4.4/4.5 GHz | 6 × 1 MB | 8.25 MB | 140 W
|
LGA 2066 | DMI 3.0 | 4 × DDR4-2666 | August 29, 2017 |
|
$835 |
Xeon W-2133 |
|
6 (12) | 3.6 GHz | 3.8/3.9 GHz | 6 × 1 MB | 8.25 MB | 140 W
|
LGA 2066 | DMI 3.0 | 4 × DDR4-2666 | August 29, 2017 |
|
$617 |
Xeon W-2125 |
|
4 (8) | 4 GHz | 4.4/4.5 GHz | 4 × 1 MB | 8.25 MB | 120 W
|
LGA 2066 | DMI 3.0 | 4 × DDR4-2666 | August 29, 2017 |
|
$444 |
Xeon W-2123 |
|
4 (8) | 3.6 GHz | 3.7/3.9 GHz | 4 × 1 MB | 8.25 MB | 120 W
|
LGA 2066 | DMI 3.0 | 4 × DDR4-2666 | August 29, 2017 |
|
$294 |
Xeon W-2104 |
|
4 (4) | 3.2 GHz | N/A | 4 × 1 MB | 8.25 MB | 120 W
|
LGA 2066 | DMI 3.0 | 4 × DDR4-2400 | August 29, 2017 |
|
$255 |
Xeon W-2102 |
|
4 (4) | 2.9 GHz | N/A | 4 × 1 MB | 8.25 MB | 120 W
|
LGA 2066 | DMI 3.0 | 4 × DDR4-2400 | August 29, 2017 |
|
$202 |
Server processors
[edit]E3 series server chips all consist of System Bus 9 GT/s, maximum memory bandwidth of 34.1GB/s dual channel memory. Unlike its predecessor, the Skylake Xeon CPUs require C230 series (C232/C236) or C240 series (C242/C246) chipset to operate, with integrated graphics working only with C236 and C246 chipsets. Mobile counterparts uses CM230 and CM240 series chipsets.
Target segment |
Cores (threads) |
Processor branding and model |
GPU | Clock rate | Cache | TDP | Release date |
Release price (USD) tray / box |
Motherboard | |||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
CPU | Graphics | L3 | L4 (eDRAM) | Socket | Interface | Memory | ||||||||||
Normal | Turbo | Normal | Turbo | |||||||||||||
Server | 4 (8) | Xeon E3 v5 | 1280v5 | — | 3.7 GHz | 4.0 GHz | — | 8 MB | — | 80 W | Q4 2015 | $612 / — | LGA 1151 |
DMI 3.0 PCIe 3.0 |
DDR4 2133/1866 or DDR3L 1333/1600 with ECC | |
1275v5 | HD P530 | 3.6 GHz | 350 MHz | 1.15 GHz | $339 / — | |||||||||||
1270v5 | — | 3.6 GHz | — | $328 / $339 | ||||||||||||
1260Lv5 | 2.9 GHz | 3.9 GHz | 45 W | $294 / — | ||||||||||||
1245v5 | HD P530 | 3.5 GHz | 350 MHz | 1.15 GHz | 80 W | $284 / — | ||||||||||
1240v5 | — | 3.5 GHz | — | $272 / $282 | ||||||||||||
1240Lv5 | 2.1 GHz | 3.2 GHz | 25 W | $278 / — | ||||||||||||
1230v5 | 3.4 GHz | 3.8 GHz | 80 W | $250 / $260 | ||||||||||||
4 (4) | 1235Lv5 | HD P530 | 2.0 GHz | 3.0 GHz | 350 MHz | 1.15 GHz | 25 W | $250 / — | ||||||||
1225v5 | 3.3 GHz | 3.7 GHz | 80 W | $213 / — | ||||||||||||
1220v5 | — | 3.0 GHz | 3.5 GHz | — | $193 / — | |||||||||||
Mobile workstation |
4 (8) | 1575Mv5 | Iris Pro P580 | 3.0 GHz | 3.9 GHz | 350 MHz | 1.1 GHz | 128 MB | 45 W | Q1 2016 | $1207 / — | BGA 1440 |
DDR4-2133 LPDDR3-1866 DDR3L-1600 with ECC | |||
1545Mv5 | 2.9 GHz | 3.8 GHz | 1.05 GHz | $679 / — | ||||||||||||
1535Mv5 | HD P530 | — | Q3 2015 | $623 / — | ||||||||||||
1505Mv5 | 2.8 GHz | 3.7 GHz | $434 / — | |||||||||||||
Embedded | 1505Lv5 | 2.0 GHz | 2.8 GHz | 1.0 GHz | 25 W | Q4 2015 | $433 / — |
Skylake-SP (14 nm) Scalable Performance
[edit]- Xeon Platinum supports up to eight sockets. Xeon Gold supports up to four sockets. Xeon Silver and Bronze support up to two sockets.
- −M: 1536 GB RAM per socket instead of 768 GB RAM fornon−M SKUs
- −F: integratedOmniPathfabric
- −T: High thermal-case and extended reliability
- Support for up to 12DIMMsofDDR4memory per CPU socket.
- Xeon Platinum, Gold 61XX, and Gold 5122 have twoAVX-512FMA units per core. Xeon Gold 51XX (except 5122), Silver, and Bronze have a singleAVX-512FMA unit per core.
Xeon Bronze and Silver (dual processor)
[edit]- Xeon Bronze 31XX has no HT or Turbo Boost support.
- Xeon Bronze 31XX supports DDR4-2133 MHz RAM. Xeon Silver 41XX supports DDR4-2400 MHz RAM.
- Xeon Bronze 31XX and Xeon Silver 41XX support two UPI links at 9.6 GT/s.
Model | sSpec number |
Cores (threads) |
Clock rate | Turbo Boost all-core/2.0 (/max. 3.0) |
L2 cache |
L3 cache |
TDP | Socket | I/O bus | Memory | Release date | Part number(s) |
Release price (USD) |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Xeon Silver 4116 |
|
12 (24) | 2.1 GHz | 2.4/3.0 GHz | 12 × 1 MB | 16.50 MB | 85 W
|
LGA 3647 | 2 × 9.6 GT/s UPI | 6 × DDR4-2400 | 11 July 2017 |
|
$1002 $1012 |
Xeon Silver 4116T |
|
12 (24) | 2.1 GHz | 2.4/3.0 GHz | 12 × 1 MB | 16.50 MB | 85 W
|
LGA 3647 | 2 × 9.6 GT/s UPI | 6 × DDR4-2400 | Q3 2017 |
|
$1112 |
Xeon Silver 4114 |
|
10 (20) | 2.2 GHz | 2.5/3.0 GHz | 10 × 1 MB | 13.75 MB | 85 W
|
LGA 3647 | 2 × 9.6 GT/s UPI | 6 × DDR4-2400 | 11 July 2017 |
|
$694 $704 |
Xeon Silver 4114T |
|
10 (20) | 2.2 GHz | 2.5/3.0 GHz | 10 × 1 MB | 13.75 MB | 85 W
|
LGA 3647 | 2 × 9.6 GT/s UPI | 6 × DDR4-2400 | Q3 2017 |
|
$773 |
Xeon Silver 4112 |
|
4 (8) | 2.6 GHz | 2.9/3.0 GHz | 4 × 1 MB | 8.25 MB | 85 W
|
LGA 3647 | 2 × 9.6 GT/s UPI | 6 × DDR4-2400 | 11 July 2017 |
|
$473 $483 |
Xeon Silver 4110 |
|
8 (16) | 2.1 GHz | 2.4/3.0 GHz | 8 × 1 MB | 11.00 MB | 85 W
|
LGA 3647 | 2 × 9.6 GT/s UPI | 6 × DDR4-2400 | 11 July 2017 |
|
$501 $511 |
Xeon Silver 4109T |
|
8 (16) | 2 GHz | 2.3/3.0 GHz | 8 × 1 MB | 11.00 MB | 70 W
|
LGA 3647 | 2 × 9.6 GT/s UPI | 6 × DDR4-2400 | 11 July 2017 |
|
$501 |
Xeon Silver 4108 |
|
8 (16) | 1.8 GHz | 2.1/3.0 GHz | 8 × 1 MB | 11.00 MB | 85 W
|
LGA 3647 | 2 × 9.6 GT/s UPI | 6 × DDR4-2400 | 11 July 2017 |
|
$417 $427 |
Xeon Bronze 3106 |
|
8 (8) | 1.7 GHz | N/A | 8 × 1 MB | 11.00 MB | 85 W
|
LGA 3647 | 2 × 9.6 GT/s UPI | 6 × DDR4-2133 | 11 July 2017 |
|
$306 $316 |
Xeon Bronze 3104 |
|
6 (6) | 1.7 GHz | N/A | 6 × 1 MB | 8.25 MB | 85 W
|
LGA 3647 | 2 × 9.6 GT/s UPI | 6 × DDR4-2133 | 11 July 2017 |
|
$223 $213 |
Xeon Gold (quad processor)
[edit]- Xeon Gold 51XX and F SKUs has two UPIs at 10.4 GT/s. Xeon Gold 61XX has three UPIs at 10.4 GT/s.
- Xeon Gold 51XX support DDR4-2400 MHz RAM (except 5122). Xeon Gold 5122 and 61XX support DDR4-2666 MHz RAM.
Model | sSpec number |
Cores (threads) |
Clock rate | Turbo Boost all-core/2.0 (/max. 3.0) |
L2 cache |
L3 cache |
TDP | Socket | I/O bus | Memory | Release date | Part number(s) |
Release price (USD) |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Xeon Gold 6161 |
|
22 (44) | 2.2 GHz | 2.7/3.0GHz | 22 × 1 MB | 30.25 MB | 165 W
|
LGA 3647 | 3 × 10.4 GT/s UPI | 6 × DDR4-2666 | 2017 |
|
|
Xeon Gold 6154 |
|
18 (36) | 3 GHz | 3.7/3.7GHz | 18 × 1 MB | 24.75 MB | 200 W
|
LGA 3647 | 3 × 10.4 GT/s UPI | 6 × DDR4-2666 | 11 July 2017 |
|
$3543 |
Xeon Gold 6152 |
|
22 (44) | 2.1 GHz | 2.8/3.7GHz | 22 × 1 MB | 30.25 MB | 140 W
|
LGA 3647 | 3 × 10.4 GT/s UPI | 6 × DDR4-2666 | 11 July 2017 |
|
$3655 $3661 |
Xeon Gold 6150 |
|
18 (36) | 2.7 GHz | 3.4/3.7GHz | 18 × 1 MB | 24.75 MB | 165 W
|
LGA 3647 | 3 × 10.4 GT/s UPI | 6 × DDR4-2666 | 11 July 2017 |
|
$3358 |
Xeon Gold 6149 | 16 (32) | 3.1 GHz | 16 × 1 MB | MB | LGA 3647 | 3 × 10.4 GT/s UPI | 6 × DDR4-2666 | OEM | |||||
Xeon Gold 6148 |
|
20 (40) | 2.4 GHz | 3.1/3.7GHz | 20 × 1 MB | 27.50 MB | 150 W
|
LGA 3647 | 3 × 10.4 GT/s UPI | 6 × DDR4-2666 | 11 July 2017 |
|
$3072 $3078 |
Xeon Gold 6148F |
|
20 (40) | 2.4 GHz | 3.1/3.7GHz | 20 × 1 MB | 27.50 MB | 150 W
|
LGA 3647 | 2 × 10.4 GT/s UPI | 6 × DDR4-2666 | 11 July 2017 |
|
$3227 |
Xeon Gold 6146 |
|
12 (24) | 3.2 GHz | 3.9/4.2GHz | 12 × 1 MB | 24.75 MB | 165 W
|
LGA 3647 | 3 × 10.4 GT/s UPI | 6 × DDR4-2666 | 11 July 2017 |
|
$3286 |
Xeon Gold 6145 |
|
20 (40) | 2 GHz | 2.7/3.7GHz | 20 × 1 MB | 27.50 MB | 145 W
|
LGA 3647 | 3 × 10.4 GT/s UPI | 6 × DDR4-2666 | 2017 |
|
|
Xeon Gold 6144 |
|
8 (16) | 3.5 GHz | 4.1/4.2GHz | 8 × 1 MB | 24.75 MB | 150 W
|
LGA 3647 | 3 × 10.4 GT/s UPI | 6 × DDR4-2666 | Q3 2017 |
|
$2925 |
Xeon Gold 6142M |
|
16 (32) | 2.6 GHz | 3.3/3.7GHz | 16 × 1 MB | 22.00 MB | 150 W
|
LGA 3647 | 3 × 10.4 GT/s UPI | 6 × DDR4-2666 | 11 July 2017 |
|
$5949 |
Xeon Gold 6142F |
|
16 (32) | 2.6 GHz | 3.3/3.7GHz | 16 × 1 MB | 22.00 MB | 160 W
|
LGA 3647 | 2 × 10.4 GT/s UPI | 6 × DDR4-2666 | 11 July 2017 |
|
$3101 |
Xeon Gold 6142 |
|
16 (32) | 2.6 GHz | 3.3/3.7GHz | 16 × 1 MB | 22.00 MB | 150 W
|
LGA 3647 | 3 × 10.4 GT/s UPI | 6 × DDR4-2666 | 11 July 2017 |
|
$2946 $2952 |
Xeon Gold 6140 |
|
18 (36) | 2.3 GHz | 3.0/3.7GHz | 18 × 1 MB | 24.75 MB | 140 W
|
LGA 3647 | 3 × 10.4 GT/s UPI | 6 × DDR4-2666 | 11 July 2017 |
|
$2445 $2451 |
Xeon Gold 6140M |
|
18 (36) | 2.3 GHz | 3.0/3.7GHz | 18 × 1 MB | 24.75 MB | 140 W
|
LGA 3647 | 3 × 10.4 GT/s UPI | 6 × DDR4-2666 | 11 July 2017 |
|
$5448 |
Xeon Gold 6138 |
|
20 (40) | 2 GHz | 2.7/3.7GHz | 20 × 1 MB | 27.50 MB | 125 W
|
LGA 3647 | 3 × 10.4 GT/s UPI | 6 × DDR4-2666 | 11 July 2017 |
|
$2612 $2618 |
Xeon Gold 6138F |
|
20 (40) | 2 GHz | 2.7/3.7GHz | 20 × 1 MB | 27.50 MB | 135 W
|
LGA 3647 | 2 × 10.4 GT/s UPI | 6 × DDR4-2666 | 11 July 2017 |
|
$2767 |
Xeon Gold 6138T |
|
20 (40) | 2 GHz | 2.7/3.7GHz | 20 × 1 MB | 27.50 MB | 125 W
|
LGA 3647 | 3 × 10.4 GT/s UPI | 6 × DDR4-2666 | 11 July 2017 |
|
$2742 |
Xeon Gold 6136 |
|
12 (24) | 3 GHz | 3.6/3.7GHz | 12 × 1 MB | 24.75 MB | 150 W
|
LGA 3647 | 3 × 10.4 GT/s UPI | 6 × DDR4-2666 | 11 July 2017 |
|
$2460 |
Xeon Gold 6134 |
|
8 (16) | 3.2 GHz | 3.7/3.7GHz | 8 × 1 MB | 24.75 MB | 130 W
|
LGA 3647 | 3 × 10.4 GT/s UPI | 6 × DDR4-2666 | 11 July 2017 |
|
$2214 $2220 |
Xeon Gold 6134M |
|
8 (16) | 3.2 GHz | 3.7/3.7GHz | 8 × 1 MB | 24.75 MB | 130 W
|
LGA 3647 | 3 × 10.4 GT/s UPI | 6 × DDR4-2666 | 11 July 2017 |
|
$5217 |
Xeon Gold 6132 |
|
14 (28) | 2.6 GHz | 3.3/3.7GHz | 14 × 1 MB | 19.25 MB | 140 W
|
LGA 3647 | 3 × 10.4 GT/s UPI | 6 × DDR4-2666 | 11 July 2017 |
|
$2111 |
Xeon Gold 6130 |
|
16 (32) | 2.1 GHz | 2.8/3.7GHz | 16 × 1 MB | 22.00 MB | 125 W
|
LGA 3647 | 3 × 10.4 GT/s UPI | 6 × DDR4-2666 | 11 July 2017 |
|
$1900 |
Xeon Gold 6130F |
|
16 (32) | 2.1 GHz | 2.8/3.7GHz | 16 × 1 MB | 22.00 MB | 125 W
|
LGA 3647 | 2 × 10.4 GT/s UPI | 6 × DDR4-2666 | 11 July 2017 |
|
$2049 |
Xeon Gold 6130T |
|
16 (32) | 2.1 GHz | 2.8/3.7GHz | 16 × 1 MB | 22.00 MB | 125 W
|
LGA 3647 | 3 × 10.4 GT/s UPI | 6 × DDR4-2666 | 11 July 2017 |
|
$1988 |
Xeon Gold 6128 |
|
6 (12) | 3.4 GHz | 3.7/3.7GHz | 6 × 1 MB | 19.25 MB | 115 W
|
LGA 3647 | 3 × 10.4 GT/s UPI | 6 × DDR4-2666 | 11 July 2017 |
|
$1691 $1697 |
Xeon Gold 6126 |
|
12 (24) | 2.6 GHz | 3.3/3.7GHz | 12 × 1 MB | 19.25 MB | 125 W
|
LGA 3647 | 3 × 10.4 GT/s UPI | 6 × DDR4-2666 | 11 July 2017 |
|
$1776 |
Xeon Gold 6126F |
|
12 (24) | 2.6 GHz | 3.3/3.7GHz | 12 × 1 MB | 19.25 MB | 135 W
|
LGA 3647 | 2 × 10.4 GT/s UPI | 6 × DDR4-2666 | 11 July 2017 |
|
$1931 |
Xeon Gold 6126T |
|
12 (24) | 2.6 GHz | 3.3/3.7GHz | 12 × 1 MB | 19.25 MB | 125 W
|
LGA 3647 | 3 × 10.4 GT/s UPI | 6 × DDR4-2666 | 11 July 2017 |
|
$1865 |
Xeon Gold 5122 |
|
4 (8) | 3.6 GHz | 3.7/3.7GHz | 4 × 1 MB | 16.50 MB | 105 W
|
LGA 3647 | 2 × 10.4 GT/s UPI | 6 × DDR4-2666 | 11 July 2017 |
|
$1221 $1227 |
Xeon Gold 5120 |
|
14 (28) | 2.2 GHz | 2.6/3.2GHz | 14 × 1 MB | 19.25 MB | 105 W
|
LGA 3647 | 2 × 10.4 GT/s UPI | 6 × DDR4-2400 | 11 July 2017 |
|
$1555 $1561 |
Xeon Gold 5120T |
|
14 (28) | 2.2 GHz | 2.6/3.2GHz | 14 × 1 MB | 19.25 MB | 105 W
|
LGA 3647 | 2 × 10.4 GT/s UPI | 6 × DDR4-2400 | 11 July 2017 |
|
$1727 |
Xeon Gold 5119T |
|
14 (28) | 1.9 GHz | 2.3/3.2GHz | 14 × 1 MB | 19.25 MB | 85 W
|
LGA 3647 | 2 × 10.4 GT/s UPI | 6 × DDR4-2400 | 11 July 2017 |
|
$1555 |
Xeon Gold 5118 |
|
12 (24) | 2.3 GHz | 2.7/3.2GHz | 12 × 1 MB | 16.50 MB | 105 W
|
LGA 3647 | 2 × 10.4 GT/s UPI | 6 × DDR4-2400 | 11 July 2017 |
|
$1273 |
Xeon Gold 5117 |
|
14 (28) | 2 GHz | 2.3/2.8GHz | 14 × 1 MB | 19.25 MB | 105 W
|
LGA 3647 | 2 × 10.4 GT/s UPI | 6 × DDR4-2400 | 11 July 2017 |
|
$1286 |
Xeon Gold 5117F |
|
14 (28) | 2 GHz | 2.3/2.8GHz | 14 × 1 MB | 19.25 MB | 113 W
|
LGA 3647 | 2 × 10.4 GT/s UPI | 6 × DDR4-2400 | 11 July 2017 |
|
|
Xeon Gold 5115 |
|
10 (20) | 2.4 GHz | 2.8/3.2GHz | 10 × 1 MB | 13.75 MB | 85 W
|
LGA 3647 | 2 × 10.4 GT/s UPI | 6 × DDR4-2400 | 11 July 2017 |
|
$1221 |
-
Intel Skylake Xeon gold processor
-
Intel Skylake Xeon gold processor, delidded
-
Die shot
Xeon Platinum (octal processor)
[edit]- Xeon Platinum non-F SKUs have three UPIs at 10.4 GT/s. Xeon Platinum F-SKUs have two UPIs at 10.4 GT/s.
- Xeon Platinum supports DDR4-2666 MHz RAM.
Model | sSpec number |
Cores (threads) |
Clock rate | Turbo Boost all-core/2.0 (/max. 3.0) |
L2 cache |
L3 cache |
TDP | Socket | I/O bus | Memory | Release date | Part number(s) |
Release price (USD) |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Xeon Platinum 8180 |
|
28 (56) | 2.5 GHz | 3.2/3.8 GHz | 28 × 1 MB | 38.50 MB | 205 W
|
LGA 3647 | 3 × 10.4 GT/s UPI | 6 × DDR4-2666 | 11 July 2017 |
|
$10,009 |
Xeon Platinum 8180M |
|
28 (56) | 2.5 GHz | 3.2/3.8 GHz | 28 × 1 MB | 38.50 MB | 205 W
|
LGA 3647 | 3 × 10.4 GT/s UPI | 6 × DDR4-2666 | 11 July 2017 |
|
$13,011 |
Xeon Platinum 8176 |
|
28 (56) | 2.1 GHz | 2.8/3.8 GHz | 28 × 1 MB | 38.50 MB | 165 W
|
LGA 3647 | 3 × 10.4 GT/s UPI | 6 × DDR4-2666 | 11 July 2017 |
|
$8790 |
Xeon Platinum 8176F |
|
28 (56) | 2.1 GHz | 2.8/3.8 GHz | 28 × 1 MB | 38.50 MB | 173 W
|
LGA 3647 | 2 × 10.4 GT/s UPI | 6 × DDR4-2666 | Q3, 2017 |
|
$8874 |
Xeon Platinum 8176M |
|
28 (56) | 2.1 GHz | 2.8/3.8 GHz | 28 × 1 MB | 38.50 MB | 165 W
|
LGA 3647 | 3 × 10.4 GT/s UPI | 6 × DDR4-2666 | 11 July 2017 |
|
$11,722 |
Xeon Platinum 8173M |
|
28 (56) | 2 GHz | 2.7/3.5 GHz | 28 × 1 MB | 38.50 MB | 165 W
|
LGA 3647 | 3 × 10.4 GT/s UPI | 6 × DDR4-2666 | 2017 |
|
|
Xeon Platinum 8170 |
|
26 (52) | 2.1 GHz | 2.8/3.7 GHz | 26 × 1 MB | 35.75 MB | 165 W
|
LGA 3647 | 3 × 10.4 GT/s UPI | 6 × DDR4-2666 | 11 July 2017 |
|
$7405 $7411 |
Xeon Platinum 8170M |
|
26 (52) | 2.1 GHz | 2.8/3.7 GHz | 26 × 1 MB | 35.75 MB | 165 W
|
LGA 3647 | 3 × 10.4 GT/s UPI | 6 × DDR4-2666 | 11 July 2017 |
|
$10,409 |
Xeon Platinum 8168 |
|
24 (48) | 2.7 GHz | 3.4/3.7 GHz | 24 × 1 MB | 33.00 MB | 205 W
|
LGA 3647 | 3 × 10.4 GT/s UPI | 6 × DDR4-2666 | 11 July 2017 |
|
$5890 |
Xeon Platinum 8167M |
|
26 (52) | 2 GHz | 2.4/2.4 GHz | 26 × 1 MB | 35.75 MB | 165 W
|
LGA 3647 | 3 × 10.4 GT/s UPI | 6 × DDR4-2666 | 2017 |
|
|
Xeon Platinum 8164 |
|
26 (52) | 2 GHz | 2.7/3.7 GHz | 26 × 1 MB | 35.75 MB | 150 W
|
LGA 3647 | 3 × 10.4 GT/s UPI | 6 × DDR4-2666 | 11 July 2017 |
|
$6114 $6120 |
Xeon Platinum 8163 |
|
24 (48) | 2.4 GHz | 2.7/3.1 GHz | 24 × 1 MB | 33.00 MB | 165 W
|
LGA 3647 | 3 × 10.4 GT/s UPI | 6 × DDR4-2666 | 2017 |
|
|
Xeon Platinum 8160 |
|
24 (48) | 2.1 GHz | 2.8/3.7 GHz | 24 × 1 MB | 33.00 MB | 150 W
|
LGA 3647 | 3 × 10.4 GT/s UPI | 6 × DDR4-2666 | 11 July 2017 |
|
$4702 $4708 |
Xeon Platinum 8160F |
|
24 (48) | 2.1 GHz | 2.8/3.7 GHz | 24 × 1 MB | 33.00 MB | 160 W
|
LGA 3647 | 2 × 10.4 GT/s UPI | 6 × DDR4-2666 | 11 July 2017 |
|
$4856 |
Xeon Platinum 8160M |
|
24 (48) | 2.1 GHz | 2.8/3.7 GHz | 24 × 1 MB | 33.00 MB | 150 W
|
LGA 3647 | 3 × 10.4 GT/s UPI | 6 × DDR4-2666 | 11 July 2017 |
|
$7704 |
Xeon Platinum 8160T |
|
24 (48) | 2.1 GHz | 2.8/3.7 GHz | 24 × 1 MB | 33.00 MB | 150 W
|
LGA 3647 | 3 × 10.4 GT/s UPI | 6 × DDR4-2666 | 11 July 2017 |
|
$4936 |
Xeon Platinum 8158 |
|
12 (24) | 3 GHz | 2.7/3.7 GHz | 12 × 1 MB | 24.75 MB | 150 W
|
LGA 3647 | 3 × 10.4 GT/s UPI | 6 × DDR4-2666 | 11 July 2017 |
|
$7007 |
Xeon Platinum 8156 |
|
4 (8) | 3.6 GHz | 3.3/3.7 GHz | 4 × 1 MB | 16.50 MB | 105 W
|
LGA 3647 | 3 × 10.4 GT/s UPI | 6 × DDR4-2666 | 11 July 2017 |
|
$7007 |
Xeon Platinum 8153 |
|
16 (32) | 2 GHz | 2.3/2.8 GHz | 16 × 1MB | 22.00MB | 125 W
|
LGA 3647 | 3 × 10.4 GT/sQPI | 6 × DDR4-2666 | 11 July 2017 |
|
$3115 |
See also
[edit]References
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External links
[edit]- Ung, Gordon (August 18, 2015)."Intel Skylake CPU details revealed: These faster, more power-efficient chips can even drive three 4K monitors".PC world.
- Shields, Anne (September 19, 2015)."Intel's Skylake a New Lifeline for the PC Market?".Yahoo Finance.
- "Graphics Driver Support Update for 10th Generation and Older Intel Processor Graphics".Intel Support. December 30, 2022.