- Aug 14, 2017
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Skylake-SP core, as in the one with AVX-512 and rearranged cache hierarchy? Interesting! I had assumed that the D would get "consumer" Skylake cores for efficiency.
Skylake-SP core, as in the one with AVX-512 and rearranged cache hierarchy? Interesting! I had assumed that the D would get "consumer" Skylake cores for efficiency.
Want it on 14+.
That's the process being used for all the other Skylake Xeons, no?
Really? Skylake-X is 14nm+, no? Skylake-SP is 14nm?
The other problem is that the extra AVX-512 unit and L2 bloats the die rather significantly. I'm not sure how much bigger but easily enough that they surely would not go more than the 16 cores that Broadwell-D already has. Although... the extra stuff is clearly bolted on, and this was presumably done by design so it could be removed "easily".
Really? Skylake-X is 14nm+, no? Skylake-SP is 14nm?
Still no. Is 14 vanilla based. AFAIK Intel will get straight to 14++ in 2018.
Skylake-X is just a partially disabled, multiplier unlocked Skylake-SP. They're both 14nm+.
https://www.servethehome.com/platform-power-consumption-first-benchmarks-intel-xeon-d-2100-series/
Kind of confirms that the Skylake Xeon-D is nothing but the Skylake-SP LCC/HCC die plus the Lewisburg chipset on package in a BGA socket and not a real optimized design. Still, I guess it's better than nothing since it's obvious they needed something when Cannonlake wasn't going to be possible.
In any case, Xeon D Skylake is likely to destroy all of AMD's server hopes, as there isn't actually anywhere that AMD can fit their chips in the ecosystem when Intel is willing to sell so much (superior) silicon for so cheap.
The reason why AMD's server skus have such limited deployment is due to these facts.
The Xeon D chips use less power, are cheaper, and perform faster. In fact its quite a bit more efficient. You are talking 15-26W extra for Lewisburg chipset features. Some comparisons show 20-25W less at similar performance, some are 15% faster at 15W less power, some show 10% gain with 35W less power. That's quite significant. The non-trivial gains would have needed a lot of work to make it possible.
Anything over Ryzen (ie. Threadripper, Epic) also has gigantic latency penalties that dwarf the memory latency and speed in any case.
...
And that's before you bring up the fact that the Intel chips also outperform all the AMD chips in all real-world workloads.