Sapphire Rapids
General information | |
---|---|
Launched | January 10, 2023 |
Marketed by | Intel |
Designed by | Intel |
Common manufacturer |
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CPUID code | 806F6 |
Product code | 80713 |
Performance | |
Max. CPU clock rate | Up to 4.8 GHz |
QPI speeds | 16 GT/s |
DMI speeds | 16 GT/s |
Cache | |
L1 cache | 80 KB per core (32 KB instruction + 48 KB data) |
L2 cache | 2 MB per core |
L3 cache | Up to 112.5 MB (1.875 MB per core) |
L4 cache | 64 GB HBM2a (Xeon Max only) |
Architecture and classification | |
Application | Server Workstation Embedded |
Technology node | Intel 7 (previously known as 10ESF) |
Microarchitecture | Golden Cove |
Instruction set | x86-64 |
Instructions | MMX, SSE, SSE2, SSE3, SSSE3, SSE4, SSE4.1, SSE4.2, AVX, AVX2, FMA3, AVX-512, AVX-VNNI, TSX, AMX, AES-NI, CLMUL, RDRAND, UINTR |
Extensions | |
Physical specifications | |
Cores |
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Memory (RAM) | |
Package |
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Socket | |
Products, models, variants | |
Product code name |
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Models |
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Brand names |
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History | |
Predecessors | Ice Lake (workstations, 1S and 2S servers) Cooper Lake (4S and 8S servers) |
Successor | Emerald Rapids |
Support status | |
Supported |
Sapphire Rapids is a codename for Intel's server (fourth generation Xeon Scalable) and workstation (Xeon W-2400/2500 and Xeon W-3400/3500) processors based on the Golden Cove microarchitecture and produced using Intel 7.[1][2][3][4] It features up to 60 cores and an array of accelerators, and it is the first generation of Intel server and workstation processors to use a chiplet design.
Sapphire Rapids is part of the Eagle Stream server platform.[5][6] In addition, it powers Aurora, an exascale supercomputer in the United States, at Argonne National Laboratory.[7]
History
Sapphire Rapids has been a long-standing Intel project along Alder Lake in development for over five years and has been subjected to many delays.[8] It was first announced by Intel at their Investor Meeting in May 2019 with the intention of Sapphire Rapids succeeding Ice Lake and Cooper Lake in 2021.[9][10] Intel again announced details on Sapphire Rapids in their August 2021 Architecture Day presentation with no mention of a launch date.[11]
Intel CEO Pat Gelsinger tacitly blamed the previous Intel leadership as a reason for Sapphire Rapid's many delays.[8] One industry analyst firm claimed that Intel was having problems with yields from its Intel 7 node with yields of 50–60% on higher core-count silicon.[12] Sapphire Rapids was originally scheduled for a launch in the first half of 2022.[13] It was later scheduled for release in Q4 2022 but was again delayed to early 2023.[14] The specific announcement date of January 10, 2023 was not revealed by Intel until November 2022.[15]
The server processor lineup was released on January 10, 2023, and the workstation processor lineup was released on February 15, 2023.[16] Those processors were available for shipping on March 14 of that year.[17] Intel shipped the millionth of this generation Xeon processors in 2023.[18]
Features
CPU
- Up to 60 Golden Cove CPU cores per package[19]
- Up to 15 cores per tile, a 60 core Xeon Platinum 8490H uses 4 dies populated with 15 cores to have 60 cores in total
- AVX512-FP16[20]
- TSX Suspend Load Address Tracking (
TSXLDTRK
)[21] - Advanced Matrix Extensions (AMX)[19]
- Trust Domain Extensions (TDX), a collection of technologies to help deploy hardware-isolated virtual machines (VMs) called trust domains (TDs)[22]
- User Interrupts (UINTR), a new architectural feature allowing interrupts to be delivered to user-mode software without kernel involvement.[23][24][25]
Accelerators
- In-Field Scan (IFS), a technology that allows for testing the processor for potential hardware faults without taking it completely offline[26]
- Data Streaming Accelerator (DSA), allows for speeding up data copy and transformation between different kinds of storage[27][28]
- QuickAssist Technology (QAT), allows for improved performance of compression and encryption tasks[28]
- Dynamic Load Balancer (DLB), allows for offloading tasks of load balancing, packet prioritization and queue management[28]
- In-Memory Analytics Accelerator (IAA), allows accelerating in-memory databases and big data analytics[28]
Not all accelerators are available in all processor models. Some accelerators are available under the Intel On Demand program, also known as Software Defined Silicon (SDSi), where a license is required to activate a given accelerator that is physically present in the processor. The license can be obtained as a one-time purchase or as a paid subscription. Activating the license requires support in the operating system. A driver with the necessary support was added in Linux kernel version 6.2.[29][28]
I/O
- PCI Express 5.0[19]
- Direct Media Interface 4.0
- 8-channel DDR5 ECC memory support up to DDR5-4800, up to 2 DIMMs per channel[30]
- On-package High Bandwidth Memory 2.0e memory as L4 cache on Xeon Max models[30][31]
- Compute Express Link 1.1[19]
Die configurations
Sapphire Rapids come in two varieties: the low-core-count variety uses a single die (MCC), and the high-core-count variety uses multiple dies on a single package (XCC).
XCC multi-die configuration
- Multi-chiplet chip with four tiles linked by 2.5D Embedded Multi-die Interconnect Bridges. Each tile is a 400mm2 system on a chip, providing both compute cores and I/O.[32]
- Each tile contains 15 Golden Cove cores, and a single UPI link
- Each tile's memory controller provides two channels of DDR5 ECC supporting 4 DIMMs (2 per channel) and 1 TB of memory with a maximum of 8 channels, 16 DIMMs, and 4 TB memory across 4 tiles[33]
- A tile provides up to 32 PCIe 5.0 lanes, but one of the eight PCIe controllers of a CPU is usually reserved for DMI, resulting in a maximum of 112 non-chipset lanes. This maximum is only reached in the W-3400 series processors, while the server processors have 80 (20 per tile).[34]
List of Sapphire Rapids processors
Sapphire Rapids-HBM (High Bandwidth Memory/Xeon Max Series)
Xeon Max processors contain 64 GB of High Bandwidth Memory.
Model number |
Cores (threads) |
Base clock |
Turbo Boost | Smart cache |
TDP | Maxi- mum scala- bility |
Registered DDR5 w. ECC support |
UPI links |
Release MSRP (USD) |
Launched | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
All core |
Single core | ||||||||||
9480 | 56 (112) | 1.9 GHz | 2.6 GHz | 3.5 GHz | 112.5 MB | 350 W | 2S | 4800 MT/s | 4 | $12980 | Q1'23 |
9470 | 52 (104) | 2.0 GHz | 2.7 GHz | 105.0 MB | $11590 | Q1'23 | |||||
9468 | 48 | (96)2.1 GHz | 2.6 GHz | $9900 | Q1'23 | ||||||
9460 | 40 | (80)2.2 GHz | 2.7 GHz | 97.5 MB | 3 | $8750 | Q1'23 | ||||
9462 | 32 | (64)2.7 GHz | 3.1 GHz | 75.0 MB | $7995 | Q1'23 |
Sapphire Rapids-SP (Scalable Performance)
With its maximum of 60 cores, Sapphire Rapids-SP competes with AMD's Epyc 8004/9004 Genoa with up to 96 cores and Bergamo with up to 128 cores. Sapphire Rapids Xeon server processors are scalable from single-socket configurations up to 8 socket configurations.[35][36]
Suffixes to denote:[37]
- +: Includes 1 of each of the four accelerators: DSA, IAA, QAT, DLB
- H: Database and analytics workloads, supports 4S (Xeon Gold) and/or 8S (Xeon Platinum) configurations and includes all of the accelerators
- M: Media transcode workloads
- N: Network/5G/Edge workloads (High TPT/Low Latency), some are uniprocessor
- P: Cloud and infrastructure as a service (IaaS) workloads
- Q: Liquid cooling
- S: Storage & Hyper-converged infrastructure (HCI) workloads
- T: Long-life use/High thermal case
- U: Uniprocessor (some workload-specific SKUs may also be uniprocessor)
- V: Optimized for cloud and software as a service (SaaS) workloads, some are uniprocessor
- Y: Speed Select Technology-Performance Profile (SST-PP) enabled (some workload-specific SKUs may also support SST-PP)
- Y+: Speed Select Technology-Performance Profile (SST-PP) enabled and includes 1 of each of the accelerators.
Model number |
Cores (threads) |
Base clock |
Turbo Boost | Smart cache |
TDP | Maxi- mum scala- bility |
Registered DDR5 w. ECC support |
UPI links |
Release MSRP (USD) | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
All core |
Single core | |||||||||
Xeon Platinum (8400) | ||||||||||
8490H | 60 (120) | 1.9 GHz | 2.9 GHz | 3.5 GHz | 112.5 MB | 350 W | 8S | 4800 MT/s | 4 | $17000 |
8488C | 48 (96) | 2.4 GHz | 3.2 GHz | 3.8 GHz | 105.0 MB | 385 W | 2S | ? | ||
8487C | 56 (112) | 1.9 GHz | ? | 3.8 GHz | 350 W | ? | ||||
8481C | 2.0 GHz | 2.9 GHz | ? | |||||||
8480+ | 3.0 GHz | 4 | $10710 | |||||||
8480C | ||||||||||
8478C | 48 (96) | 2.2 GHz | ? | ? | ||||||
8475B | 2.7 GHz | 3.2 GHz | 97.5 MB | ? | ||||||
8474C | 2.1 GHz | ? | ? | |||||||
8473C | 52 (104) | 2.9 GHz | 105.0 MB | ? | ||||||
8471N | 1.8 GHz | 2.8 GHz | 3.6 GHz | 97.5 MB | 300 W | 1S | 4 | $5171 | ||
8470Q | 2.1 GHz | 3.2 GHz | 3.8 GHz | 105.0 MB | 350 W | 2S | $9410 | |||
8470N | 1.7 GHz | 2.7 GHz | 3.6 GHz | 97.5 MB | 300 W | $9520 | ||||
8470 | 2.0 GHz | 3.0 GHz | 3.8 GHz | 105.0 MB | 350 W | $9359 | ||||
8469C | 48 (96) | 2.6 GHz | 3.1 GHz | 97.5 MB | ? | |||||
8468V | 2.4 GHz | 2.9 GHz | 330 W | 3 | $7121 | |||||
8468H | 2.1 GHz | 3.0 GHz | 105.0 MB | 8S | 4 | $13923 | ||||
8468 | 3.1 GHz | 350 W | 2S | $7214 | ||||||
8465C | 52 (104) | 2.9 GHz | ? | |||||||
8462Y+ | 32 (64) | 2.8 GHz | 3.6 GHz | 4.1 GHz | 60.0 MB | 300 W | 3 | $5945 | ||
8461V | 48 (96) | 2.2 GHz | 2.8 GHz | 3.7 GHz | 97.5 MB | 1S | 0 | $4491 | ||
8460Y+ | 40 (80) | 2.0 GHz | 105.0 MB | 2S | 4 | $5558 | ||||
8460H | 2.2 GHz | 3.1 GHz | 3.8 GHz | 330 W | 8S | $10710 | ||||
8458P | 44 (88) | 2.7 GHz | 3.2 GHz | 82.5 MB | 350 W | 2S | 3 | $7121 | ||
8454H | 32 (64) | 2.1 GHz | 2.7 GHz | 3.4 GHz | 270 W | 8S | 4 | $6540 | ||
8452Y | 36 (72) | 2.0 GHz | 2.8 GHz | 3.2 GHz | 67.5 MB | 300 W | 2S | $3995 | ||
8450H | 28 (56) | 2.6 GHz | 3.5 GHz | 75.0 MB | 250 W | 8S | $4708 | |||
8444H | 16 (32) | 2.9 GHz | 3.2 GHz | 4.0 GHz | 45.0 MB | 270 W | $4234 | |||
8432C | 40 (80) | ? | ? | 3.8 GHz | ? | 350 W | 2S | ? | ||
8422C | 36 (72) | ? | ? | ? | ? | ? | ||||
Xeon Gold (5400 and 6400) | ||||||||||
6462C | 32 (64) | 3.3 GHz | ? | ? | 60.0 MB | ? | 2S | 4800 MT/s | ? | |
6458Q | 3.1 GHz | 4.0 GHz | 350 W | 3 | $6416 | |||||
6456C | 2.9 GHz | 3.3 GHz | 4.1 GHz | 280 W | ? | |||||
6454S | 2.2 GHz | 2.8 GHz | 3.4 GHz | 270 W | 4 | $3157 | ||||
6448Y | 2.1 GHz | 3.0 GHz | 4.1 GHz | 225 W | 3 | $3583 | ||||
6448H | 2.4 GHz | 3.2 GHz | 250 W | 4S | $3658 | |||||
6444Y | 16 (32) | 3.6 GHz | 4.0 GHz | 45.0 MB | 270 W | 2S | $3622 | |||
6442Y | 24 (48) | 2.6 GHz | 3.3 GHz | 4.0 GHz | 60.0 MB | 225 W | $2878 | |||
6438Y+ | 32 (64) | 2.0 GHz | 2.8 GHz | 205 W | $3141 | |||||
6438N | 2.7 GHz | 3.6 GHz | $3351 | |||||||
6438M | 2.2 GHz | 2.8 GHz | 3.9 GHz | $3273 | ||||||
6434H | 8 (16) | 3.7 GHz | 4.1 GHz | 22.5 MB | 195 W | 4S | $3070 | |||
6434 | 2S | $2607 | ||||||||
6430 | 32 (64) | 2.1 GHz | 2.6 GHz | 3.4 GHz | 60.0 MB | 270 W | 4400 MT/s | $2128 | ||
6428N | 1.8 GHz | 2.5 GHz | 3.8 GHz | 185 W | 4000 MT/s | $3200 | ||||
6426Y | 16 (32) | 2.5 GHz | 3.3 GHz | 4.1 GHz | 37.5 MB | 4800 MT/s | $1517 | |||
6421N | 32 (64) | 1.8 GHz | 2.6 GHz | 3.6 GHz | 60.0 MB | 1S | 4400 MT/s | $2368 | ||
6418H | 24 (48) | 2.1 GHz | 2.9 GHz | 4.0 GHz | 4S | 4800 MT/s | $2065 | |||
6416H | 18 (36) | 2.2 GHz | 4.2 GHz | 45.0 MB | 165 W | $1444 | ||||
6414U | 32 (64) | 2.0 GHz | 2.6 GHz | 3.4 GHz | 60.0 MB | 250 W | 1S | 0 | $2296 | |
5420+ | 28 (56) | 2.7 GHz | 4.1 GHz | 52.5 MB | 205 W | 2S | 4400 MT/s | 3 | $1848 | |
5418Y | 24 (48) | 2.8 GHz | 3.8 GHz | 45.0 MB | 185 W | $1483 | ||||
5418N | 1.8 GHz | 2.6 GHz | 165 W | 4000 MT/s | $1664 | |||||
5416S | 16 (32) | 2.0 GHz | 2.8 GHz | 4.0 GHz | 30.0 MB | 150 W | 4400 MT/s | $944 | ||
5415+ | 8 (16) | 2.9 GHz | 3.6 GHz | 4.1 GHz | 22.5 MB | $1066 | ||||
5412U | 24 (48) | 2.1 GHz | 2.9 GHz | 3.9 GHz | 45.0 MB | 185 W | 1S | 0 | $1113 | |
5411N | 1.9 GHz | 2.8 GHz | 165 W | 3 | $1388 | |||||
Xeon Silver (4400) | ||||||||||
4416+ | 20 (40) | 2.0 GHz | 2.9 GHz | 3.9 GHz | 37.5 MB | 165 W | 2S | 4000 MT/s | 2 | $1176 |
4410Y | 12 (24) | 2.8 GHz | 30.0 MB | 150 W | $563 | |||||
4410T | 10 (20) | 2.7 GHz | 3.4 GHz | 4.0 GHz | 26.25 MB | $624 | ||||
Xeon Bronze (3400, 3500) | ||||||||||
3508U | 8 (8) | 2.1 GHz | 2.2 GHz | 22.5 MB | 125 W | 1S | 4400 MT/s | 0 | $415-$425 | |
3408U | 1.8 GHz | 1.9 GHz | 4000 MT/s |
Sapphire Rapids-WS (Workstation)
With its maximum of 60 cores, Sapphire Rapids-WS competes with AMD's Threadripper PRO 5000WX Chagall with up to 64 cores.[38] Like Intel's Core product segmentation into i3, i5, i7 and i9, Sapphire Rapids-WS is labeled Xeon w3, w5, w7 and w9.[39] Sapphire Rapids-WS was unveiled in February 2023, and was made available for OEMs in March.[40][41] CPUs with "X" suffix have its multiplier unlocked for overclocking.[42]
- No suffix letter: Locked clock multiplier
- X: Unlocked clock multiplier (adjustable with no ratio limit)
- Xeon W-2400/2500 uses a monolithic design and supports up to 64 PCI Express 5.0 lanes, while Xeon W-3400/3500 uses a chiplet design and supports up to 112 lanes. Both support 8 DMI 4.0 lanes.
Model | Cores (threads) |
Clock rate (GHz) | Smart cache |
Registered DDR5 w. ECC support |
TDP | Release MSRP (USD) | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Base | Turbo Boost | Base | Turbo | ||||||
2.0 | 3.0 | ||||||||
Xeon W-3400 (SPR-112L) | |||||||||
w9-3495X | 56 (112) | 1.9 | 4.6 | 4.8 | 105 MB | 8-channel 4800 MT/s 4 TB |
350 W | 420 W | $5889 |
w9-3475X | 36 (72) | 2.2 | 82.5 MB | 300 W | $3739 | ||||
w7-3465X | 28 (56) | 2.5 | 75.0 MB | 360 W | $2889 | ||||
w7-3455 | 24 (48) | 67.5 MB | 270 W | 324 W | $2489 | ||||
w7-3445 | 20 (40) | 2.6 | 52.5 MB | $1989 | |||||
w5-3435X | 16 (32) | 3.1 | 4.5 | 4.7 | 45.0 MB | $1589 | |||
w5-3425 | 12 (24) | 3.2 | 4.4 | 4.6 | 30.0 MB | $1189 | |||
Xeon W-2400 (SPR-64L) | |||||||||
w7-2495X | 24 (48) | 2.5 | 4.6 | 4.8 | 45.0 MB | 4-channel 4800 MT/s 2 TB |
225 W | 270 W | $2189 |
w7-2475X | 20 (40) | 2.6 | 37.5 MB | $1789 | |||||
w5-2465X | 16 (32) | 3.1 | 4.5 | 4.7 | 33.75 MB | 200 W | 240 W | $1389 | |
w5-2455X | 12 (24) | 3.2 | 4.4 | 4.6 | 30.0 MB | $1039 | |||
w5-2445 | 10 (20) | 3.1 | 26.25 MB | 175 W | 210 W | $839 | |||
w3-2435 | 8 (16) | 4.3 | 4.5 | 22.5 MB | 4-channel 4400 MT/s 2 TB |
165 W | 198 W | $669 | |
w3-2425 | 6 (12) | 3.0 | 4.2 | 4.4 | 15.0 MB | 130 W | 156 W | $529 | |
w3-2423 | 2.1 | 4.0 | 4.2 | 120 W | 144 W | $359 |
Model | Cores (threads) |
Clock rate (GHz) | Smart cache |
Registered DDR5 w. ECC support |
TDP | Release MSRP (USD) | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Base | Turbo Boost | Base | Turbo | ||||||
2.0 | 3.0 | ||||||||
Xeon W-3500 (SPR-112L) | |||||||||
w9-3595X | 60 (120) | 2.0 | 4.6 | 4.8 | 112.5 MB | 8-channel 4800 MT/s 4 TB |
385 W | 462 W | $5889 |
w9-3575X | 44 (88) | 2.2 | 97.5 MB | 340 W | 408 W | $3789 | |||
w7-3565X | 32 (64) | 2.5 | 82.5 MB | 335 W | 402 W | $2689 | |||
w7-3555 | 28 (56) | 2.7 | 75.0 MB | 325 W | 390 W | $2339 | |||
w7-3545 | 24 (48) | 67.5 MB | 315 W | 372 W | $2039 | ||||
w5-3535X | 20 (40) | 2.9 | 52.5 MB | 300 W | 360 W | $1689 | |||
w5-3525 | 16 (32) | 3.2 | 45.0 MB | 290 W | 348 W | $1389 | |||
Xeon W-2500 (SPR-64L) | |||||||||
w7-2595X | 26 (52) | 2.8 | 4.6 | 4.8 | 48.75 MB | 4-channel 4800 MT/s 2 TB |
250 W | 300 W | $2039 |
w7-2575X | 22 (44) | 3.0 | 45.0 MB | $1689 | |||||
w5-2565X | 18 (36) | 3.2 | 37.5 MB | 240 W | 288 W | $1339 | |||
w5-2555X | 14 (28) | 3.3 | 33.75 MB | 210 W | 252 W | $1069 | |||
w5-2545 | 12 (24) | 3.5 | 4.5 | 4.7 | 30.0 MB | $889 | |||
w3-2535 | 10 (20) | 4.4 | 4.6 | 26.25 MB | 185 W | 222 W | $739 | ||
w3-2525 | 8 (16) | 4.3 | 4.5 | 22.5 MB | 175 W | 210 W | $609 |
See also
- Intel's process–architecture–optimization model
- Intel's tick–tock model
- List of Intel CPU microarchitectures
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