News
AMD Releases Next-Gen Opterons
- By Joab Jackson
- November 13, 2008
Advanced Micro Devices will release the next generation of quad-core Opteron
processors, a line formerly code-named "Shanghai," by the end of the
year, according to Steve Demski, an AMD product and marketing manager.
The will be the first line of AMD server and workstation processors created
with the smaller 45-nanometer lithography process, which should provide improved
performance and lower power requirements. The previous Opteron generation were
created by a 65 nanometer process.
The five new Opteron models AMD will release by the end of the year will range
in speed from 2.3 Ghz to 2.7 Ghz. All will run at 75 watts. Additional special
editions for 55-watt low-power usage (the HE models) and 105-watt high-performance
usage (SE) will be available in the first part of 2009.
Demski touted the smaller lithography process as being key for the energy savings.
The lithography process involves etching out circuits on the dye using laser
beams, in this case beams 45 nanometers wide, rather than 65. Printing circuit
patterns on the chip wafer with a finer process means the circuitry itself will
use less power, as it is smaller and more tightly laid out.
"With a smaller dye shrink, you actually have a lower capacitance on the
dye itself, and that leads to lower idle power," Demski said. "We
measure about 25 percent lower idle power at the CPU level, and at the system
level that equates to about 8 percent lower power."
The chips also feature a new technology, called Smart Fetch, which reduces
power consumption further, namely by turning off individual cores when they
are not needed. The company predicts that this approach can cut power usage
by up to 21 percent.
The new lithography process has also allowed AMD to up the clock speed on the
Opterons, while not creating any additional heat. While the former generation,
code-named "Barcelona," topped out at 2.3 Ghz, this generation ranges
from 2.3 to 2.7 Ghz -- all running at the same 75-watt power envelope as Barcelona
chips.
In addition, the chips will also come with a number of tweaks that should improve
performance. The L3 cache has been increased from 2MB to 6MB. The chips will
support the faster, next-generation DDR II 800 random access memory. A more
efficient way of checking coherency among the various cores has been added.
AMD has also doubled the frequency of the HyperTransport bus, from 8GB per
second, to 16GB per second. This should provide "significantly more bandwidth
between CPUs," Demski said.
All these improvements should add up to better benchmark scores for the chips.
And Demski provided a few. He boasted that a 2.7 Ghz Opteron 2384 could performed
32 percent faster than an Intel E5450 3 Ghz Xeon in executing integer-throughput
tasks, as well as 14 percent faster in executing Java programs. The company
has submitted these benchmarks to the Standard Performance
Evaluation Corporation for posting.
Cray, Dell, Fujitsu, Hewlett-Packard, IBM and Sun Microsystems have all prepared
server or workstation platforms that will incorporate this generation of processors,
Demski said.
The 75 watt models, will range from $377 wholesale, for the 2.3 Ghz 2376, to
$989 for the 2.7 Ghz 2384.
About the Author
Joab Jackson is the chief technology editor of Government Computing News (GCN.com).