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Sapphire Rapids

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Sapphire Rapids
General information
Designed byIntel
Architecture and classification
Instructionsx86-64 Intel 64
Extensions
  • bfloat16
Physical specifications
Transistors
Products, models, variants
Brand name
    • Xeon
History
PredecessorServer: Ice Lake-SP (optimization)
SuccessorGranite Rapids (unknown)

Sapphire Rapids is the Intel CPU microarchitecture based on the second refinement of the 10 nanometer process.[1][2] It will be used as part of the Eagle Stream server platform in 2021.[3]

A leaked Intel slide shows DDR5 SDRAM support among the new features of Sapphire Rapids, where the integrated memory controller of previous microarchitectures used DDR4 SDRAM.[4]

Sapphire Rapids will be the processor for the first exascale supercomputer in the United States, Aurora, at Argonne National Laboratory.[5]

Features

See also

References

  1. ^ Eassa, Ashraf. "Here's How Intel Corp. Will Put Data Center Chips First". The Motley Fool. Retrieved 1 October 2017.
  2. ^ Mujtaba, Hassan (14 October 2019). "Intel Sapphire Rapids & Granite Rapids Xeons Are LGA 4677 Compatible". Wccftech. Retrieved 14 March 2020.
  3. ^ Mujtaba, Hassan (21 May 2019). "Intel Xeon Roadmap Leak, 10nm Ice Lake, Sapphire Rapids CPU Detailed". Wccftech. Retrieved 14 March 2020.
  4. ^ https://www.tomshardware.com/news/intel-server-ddr5-pcie-5.0-roadmap-leaked-granite-rapids,39403.html
  5. ^ Russell, John (17 November 2019). "Intel Debuts New GPU – Ponte Vecchio – and Outlines Aspirations for oneAPI". HPCwire. Retrieved 18 November 2019.