Sapphire Rapids

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]

Sapphire Rapids
General Info
Designed byIntel
Architecture and classification
Architecturex86-64
Instructionsx86-64 Intel 64
Extensions
  • bfloat16
Physical specifications
Transistors
  • 10 nanometer transistors
Products, models, variants
Brand name(s)
    • Xeon
History
PredecessorServer: Ice Lake-SP (optimization)
SuccessorGranite Rapids (unknown)

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

gollark: What does `waitForOpponent` do?
gollark: Maybe `waitForOpponent` does something. Presumably if the ball is available in `b.slope` and whatever, it should work.
gollark: skynet.pongReceive is...?
gollark: Wow!
gollark: A thing for tracking players' locations.

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.
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