AMD CEO Lisa Su shared the company's Zen 4 CPU roadmap today at its AMD Accelerated Data Center event, including a 96-core Genoa model and a 128-core Bergamo chip. That adds yet more excitement to the event after AMD unveiled the EPYC Milan-X chips with up to 768MB of L3 cache and the Instinct MI250X GPU. AMD also shared its first details of the 5nm TSMC process it will use for the new Genoa and Bergamo chips, claiming it provides twice the density and power efficiency along with 1.25X more performance than the 7nm process AMD uses for its current-gen chips.
The new roadmap covers the fourth-gen EYPC processors. The 96-core Genoa will come on the 5nm process in 2022, while the 128-core Bergamo, also on 5nm, will come to market in 2023. Bergamo comes with a new type of 'Zen 4c' core optimized for specific use cases, meaning that AMD's Zen 4 chips will come with two types of cores, with the 'c' cores obviously being the smaller variants.
Here's the TLDR for AMD's Zen 4 CPU roadmap:
- “Genoa” will have up to 96 high-performance “Zen 4” cores, implement the next generation of memory and I/O technologies in DDR5 and PCIe Gen 5 and drive platform capabilities that perfectly balance the Zen 4 core, memory, and I/O to deliver leadership performance
- “Bergamo” is a high-core count compute engine, customized for cloud native applications that demand high density thread density. Featuring 128 high performance “Zen 4 C” cores
- "Bergamo” has all the same features as Genoa including, DDR5, PCIe 5, CXL 1.1, same RAS, and the full suite of Infinity Guard security features, and it is socket compatible with Genoa
Genoa will have the 5nm process from TSMC, and AMD says 5nm offers twice the density and power efficiency of the 7nm process that powers the current-gen EPYC Milan chips. It also offers 1.25X of the performance of the 7nm process. That also bodes well for the consumer-focused Ryzen Zen 4 chips as well.
The EPYC Genoa chips will have up to 96 Zen 4 cores and support DDR5 and PCIe 5.0, along with the CXL 1.1 interface that allows for coherent memory connections between devices. This chip will address HPC and general-purpose data center, enterprise, and cloud workloads, with Su saying it will extend both per-core and socket-level (multi-threaded) performance. Genoa is sampling to customers now and is on track for launch in 2022.
Bergamo is also fabbed on the 5nm process and will come with up to 128 cores in a single chip.
AMD has created a new 'Zen 4c' type of Zen 4 core, with the 'c' signifying that this core is designed for cloud-native workloads. The Zen 4c cores debut in the 5nm EPYC Bergamo, which is socket-compatible with Genoa and uses the same Zen 4 instruction set. That means you can drop these chips into the same servers as the Genoa models.
It's likely that these 'c' cores are smaller than the standard Zen 4 core that will debut in Genoa, with certain unneeded functionality removed to improve compute density. The chips do have a density-optimized cache hierarchy to increase core counts, thus addressing cloud workloads that require higher thread density. This could mean that the chips have either smaller cache(s), or perhaps a cache level has been removed, but AMD hasn't shared details.
AMD does say that Begamo will offer a higher level of power efficiency and performance per socket. Bergamo will ship in the first half of 2023 and comes with the same overall feature set as Genoa, so it has features like PCIe 5.0, DDR5, and CXL 1.1.
We're sure to learn more as AMD comes closer to launching these processors. Stay tuned.
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