Epyc Explained

Epyc
Slowest:2.7
Fastest:4.4
Size-From:14 nm
Size-To:3 nm
Soldby:AMD
Designfirm:AMD
Manuf1:GlobalFoundries (14 nm and 12 nm)
Manuf2:TSMC (7 nm and beyond)
Core1:Naples
Core2:Rome
Core3:Milan
Core4:Genoa
Core5:Bergamo
Core6:Siena
Core7:Turin
Sock1:SP3
SP5
SP6
Arch:AMD64 (x86-64)
Extensions:MMX(+), SSE1, SSE2, SSE3, SSSE3, SSE4a, SSE4.1, SSE4.2, AVX, AVX2, AVX-512 (with Zen 4 and later), FMA3, CVT16/F16C, ABM, BMI1, BMI2, AES, CLMUL, RDRAND, SHA, SME, AMD-V, AMD-Vi
Numcores:up to 128 cores/256 threads per socket
Memory:up to 12 memory channels at 4800 MT/s
Predecessor:Opteron

Epyc (stylized as EPYC) is a brand of multi-core x86-64 microprocessors designed and sold by AMD, based on the company's Zen microarchitecture. Introduced in June 2017, they are specifically targeted for the server and embedded system markets.[1]

Epyc processors share the same microarchitecture as their regular desktop-grade counterparts, but have enterprise-grade features such as higher core counts, more PCI Express lanes, support for larger amounts of RAM, and larger cache memory. They also support multi-chip and dual-socket system configurations by using the Infinity Fabric interconnect.

History

In March 2017, AMD announced plans to re-enter the server market with a platform based on the Zen microarchitecture, codenamed Naples, and officially revealed it under the brand name Epyc in May.[2] That June AMD officially launched Epyc 7001 series processors, offering up to 32 cores per socket, and enabling performance that allowed Epyc to be competitive with the competing Intel Xeon Scalable product line.[3] In August 2019, the Epyc 7002 "Rome" series processors, based on the Zen 2 microarchitecture, launched, doubling the core count per socket to 64, and increasing per-core performance dramatically over the last generation architecture.

In March 2021, AMD launched the Epyc 7003 "Milan" series, based on the Zen 3 microarchitecture.[4] Epyc Milan brought the same 64 cores as Epyc Rome, but with much higher per-core performance, with the Epyc 7763 beating the Epyc 7702 by up to 22 percent despite having the same number of cores and threads.[5] A refresh of the Epyc 7003 "Milan" series with 3D V-Cache, named Milan-X, launched on March 21, 2022, using the same cores as Milan, but with an additional 512 MB of cache stacked onto the compute dies, bringing the total amount of cache per CPU to 768 MB.

In September 2021, Oak Ridge National Laboratory partnered with AMD and HPE Cray to build Frontier, a supercomputer with 9,472 Epyc 7453 CPUs and 37,888 Instinct MI250X GPUs, becoming operational by May 2022. As of November 2023, it is the most powerful supercomputer in the world according to the TOP500, with a peak performance of over 1.6 exaFLOPS.

In November 2021, AMD detailed the upcoming generations of Epyc, and unveiled the new LGA-6096 SP5 socket that would support the new generations of Epyc chips. Codenamed Genoa, these CPUs are based on the Zen 4 microarchitecture and built on TSMC's N5 node, supporting up to 96 cores and 192 threads per socket, alongside 12 channels of DDR5[6] and 128 PCIe 5.0 lanes. Genoa also became the first x86 server CPU to support Compute Express Link 1.1,[7] or CXL, allowing for further expansion of memory and other devices with a high bandwidth interface built on PCIe 5.0. AMD also shared information regarding the sister chip of Genoa, codenamed Bergamo. Bergamo is based on a modified version of Zen 4 named Zen 4c, designed to allow for much higher core counts and efficiency at the cost of lower single-core performance, targeting cloud providers and workloads, compared to traditional high performance computing workloads.[8] It is compatible with Socket SP5, and supports up to 128 cores and 256 threads per socket.[9]

In November 2022, AMD launched their 4th generation Epyc "Genoa" series of CPUs. Some tech reviewers and customers had already received hardware for testing and benchmarking, and third party benchmarks of Genoa parts were immediately available. The flagship part, the 96 core Epyc 9654, set records for multi-core performance, and showed up to 4× performance compared to Intel's flagship part, the Xeon Platinum 8380. High memory bandwidth and extensive PCIe connectivity removed many bottlenecks, allowing all 96 cores to be utilized in workloads where previous generation Milan chips would have been I/O-bound.

In June 2023, AMD began shipping the 3D V-Cache enabled Genoa-X lineup, a variant of Genoa that uses the same 3D die stacking technology as Milan-X to enable up to 1152 MB of L3 cache, a 50% increase over Milan-X, which had a maximum of 768 MB of L3 cache.[10] On the same day, AMD also announced the release of their cloud optimized Zen 4c SKUs, codenamed Bergamo, offering up to 128 cores per socket, utilizing a modified version of the Zen 4 core that was optimized for power efficiency and to reduce die space. Zen 4c cores do not have any instructions removed compared to standard Zen 4 cores; instead, the amount of L3 cache per CCX is reduced from 32 MB to 16 MB, and the frequency of the cores is reduced.[11] Bergamo is socket compatible with Genoa, using the same SP5 socket and supporting the same CXL, PCIe, and DDR5 capacity as Genoa.[12]

In September 2023, AMD launched their low power and embedded 8004 series of CPUs, codenamed Siena. Siena utilizes a new socket, called SP6, which has a smaller footprint and pin count than the SP5 socket of its contemporary Genoa processors. Siena utilizes the same Zen 4c core architecture as Bergamo cloud native processors, allowing up to 64 cores per processor, and the same 6 nm I/O die as Bergamo and Genoa, although certain features have been cut down, such as reducing the memory support from 12 channels of DDR5 to only 6, and removing dual socket support.[13]

AMD Epyc CPU codenames follow the naming scheme of Italian cities, including Milan, Rome, Naples, Genoa, Bergamo, Siena, and Turin.

AMD Epyc CPU generations[14] [15] [16] [17] [18] ! Gen! Year! Codename! Product line! Cores! Socket! Memory
Server
1st2017Naples7001 series32 × ZenSP3 (LGA)DDR4
2nd2019 Rome7002 series64 × Zen 2
3rd2021 Milan7003 series64 × Zen 3
2022Milan-X
4thGenoa9004 series96 × Zen 4SP5 (LGA)DDR5
2023Genoa-X
Bergamo128 × Zen 4c
Siena8004 series64 × Zen 4cSP6 (LGA)
5th2024Turin9005 series128 × Zen 5SP5 (LGA)
Turin Dense192 × Zen 5c
6thTBAVeniceSP7 (LGA)
Embedded
1st2018Snowy OwlEmbedded 3001 series16 × ZenSP4 (BGA)DDR4
2nd2019NaplesEmbedded 7001 series32 × ZenSP3 (BGA)
3rd2021RomeEmbedded 7002 series64 × Zen 2
4th2023GenoaEmbedded 9004 series96 × Zen 4SP5 (BGA)DDR5

Design

Epyc CPUs use a multi-chip module design to enable higher yields for a CPU than traditional monolithic dies. First generation Epyc CPUs are composed of four 14 nm compute dies, each with up to 8 cores.[19] [20] Cores are symmetrically disabled on dies to create lower binned products with fewer cores but the same I/O and memory footprint. Second and Third gen Epyc CPUs are composed of eight compute dies built on a 7 nm process node, and a large input/output (I/O) die built on a 14 nm process node.[21] Third gen Milan-X CPUs use advanced through-silicon-vias to stack an additional die on top of each of the 8 compute dies, adding 64 MB of L3 cache per die.[22]

Epyc CPUs supports both single socket and dual socket operation. In a dual socket configuration, 64 PCIe lanes from each CPU are allocated to AMD's proprietary Infinity Fabric interconnect to allow for full bandwidth between both CPUs.[23] Thus, a dual socket configuration has the same number of usable PCIe lanes as a single socket configuration. First generation Epyc CPUs had 128 PCIe 3.0 lanes, while second and third generation had 128 PCIe 4.0 lanes. All current Epyc CPUs are equipped with up to eight channels of DDR4 at varying speeds, though next gen Genoa CPUs are confirmed by AMD to support up to twelve channels of DDR5.

Unlike Opteron, Intel equivalents and AMD's desktop processors (excluding Socket AM1), Epyc processors are chipset-free - also known as system on a chip. That means most features required to make servers fully functional (such as memory, PCI Express, SATA controllers, etc.) are fully integrated into the processor, eliminating the need for a chipset to be placed on the mainboard. Some features may require the use of additional controller chips to utilize.

Reception

Initial reception to Epyc was generally positive.[24] Epyc was generally found to outperform Intel CPUs in cases where the cores could work independently, such as in high-performance computing and big-data applications. First generation Epyc fell behind in database tasks compared to Intel's Xeon parts due to higher cache latency.[24] In 2021 Meta Platforms selected Epyc chips for its metaverse data centers.[25]

Epyc Genoa was well received, as it offered improved performance and efficiency compared to previous offerings, though received some criticism for not having 2 DIMMs per channel configurations validating, with some reviewers calling it an "incomplete platform".[26]

List of Epyc processors

Server

First generation Epyc (Naples)

The following table lists the devices using the first generation design.

A "P" suffix denotes support for only a single socket configuration. Non-P models use 64 PCIe lanes from each processor for the communication between processors.

Second generation Epyc (Rome)

In November 2018, AMD announced Epyc 2 at their Next Horizon event, the second generation of Epyc processors codenamed "Rome" and based on the Zen 2 microarchitecture.[27] The processors feature up to eight 7 nm-based "chiplet" processors with a 14 nm-based IO chip providing 128 PCIe 4.0 lanes in the center interconnected via Infinity Fabric. The processors support up to 8 channels of DDR4 RAM up to 4 TB, and introduce support for PCIe 4.0. These processors have up to 64 cores with 128 SMT threads per socket.[28] The 7nm "Rome" is manufactured by TSMC.[21] It was released on August 7, 2019.[29] It has 39.5 billion transistors.[30]

In April 2020, AMD launched three new SKUs using Epyc’s 7nm Rome platform. The three processors introduced were the eight-core Epyc 7F32, the 16-core 7F52 and the 24-core 7F72, featuring base clocks up to 3.7 GHz (up to 3.9 GHz with boost) within a TDP range of 180 to 240 watts. The launch was supported by Dell EMC, Hewlett Packard Enterprise, Lenovo, Supermicro, and Nutanix.[31]

Third generation Epyc (Milan)

At the HPC-AI Advisory Council in the United Kingdom in October 2019, AMD stated specifications for Milan, Epyc chips based on the Zen 3 microarchitecture.[32] Milan chips will use Socket SP3, with up to 64 cores on package, and support eight-channel DDR4 RAM and 128 PCIe 4.0 lanes. It also announced plans for the subsequent generation of chips, codenamed Genoa, that will be based on the Zen 4 microarchitecture and use Socket SP5.

Milan CPUs were launched by AMD on March 15, 2021.[33]

Milan-X CPUs were launched March 21, 2022.[34] They use 3D V-Cache technology to increase the maximum L3 cache per socket capacity from 256 MB to 768 MB.[35] [36] [37]

Fourth generation Epyc (Genoa, Bergamo and Siena)

On November 10, 2022, AMD launched the fourth generation of Epyc server and data center processors based on the Zen 4 microarchitecture, codenamed Genoa.[38] At their launch event, AMD announced that Microsoft and Google would be some of Genoa's customers.[39] Genoa features between 16 and 96 cores with support for PCIe 5.0 and DDR5. There was also an emphasis by AMD on Genoa's energy efficiency, which according to AMD CEO Lisa Su, means "lower total cost of ownership" for enterprise and cloud datacenter clients.[40] Genoa uses AMD's new SP5 (LGA 6096) socket.[41]

On June 13, 2023, AMD introduced Genoa-X with 3D V-Cache technology for technical computing performance and Bergamo (9734, 9754 and 9754S) for cloud native computing.[42]

On September 18, 2023, AMD introduced the low power Siena lineup of processors, based on the Zen 4c microarchitecture. Siena supports up to 64 cores on the new SP6 socket, which is currently only used by Siena processors. Siena uses the same I/O die as Bergamo, however certain features, such as dual socket support, are removed, and other features are reduced, such as the change from 12 channel memory support to 6 channel memory support.[43]

Fifth generation Epyc (Turin and Turin Dense)

The fifth generation of Epyc processors were showcased by AMD at Computex 2024 on June 3. Named the Epyc 9005 series, it will come in two variants:[44]

Both variants are officially referred to under the Turin codename by AMD, although the nickname of "Turin Dense" has also been used to refer to the Zen 5c based CPUs.[45]

Both of these processor series will be socket-compatible with the SP5 socket used by Genoa and Bergamo. Epyc 9005 series will launch in 2H 2024.[46]

Embedded

First generation Epyc (Snowy Owl)

In February 2018, AMD also announced the Epyc 3000 series of embedded Zen CPUs.[47]

Chinese variants

See main article: article and Hygon Information Technology.

A variant created for the Chinese server market by Hygon Information Technology is the Hygon Dhyana system on a chip.[48] [49] It is noted to be a variant of the AMD Epyc, and is so similar that "there is little to no differentiation between the chips". It has been noted that there is "less than 200 lines of new kernel code" for Linux kernel support, and that the Dhyana is "mostly a re-branded Zen CPU for the Chinese server market". Later benchmarks showed that certain floating point instructions are performing worse, probably to comply with US export restrictions.[50] AES and other western cryptography algorithms are replaced by Chinese variants throughout the design.

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Cutress . Ian . May 30, 2017 . Computex 2017: AMD Press Event Live Blog . AnandTech . en-US . November 7, 2022.
  2. News: Kampman . Jeff . May 16, 2017 . AMD's Naples datacenter CPUs will make an Epyc splash . Tech Report . May 16, 2017.
  3. News: Cutress . Ian . June 20, 2017 . AMD's Future in Servers: New 7000-Series CPUs Launched and EPYC Analysis . AnandTech . en-US . July 12, 2017.
  4. Web site: Alcorn . Paul . March 15, 2021 . Watch AMD's Epyc 7003 Milan Launch Here . Tom's Hardware . en-US . April 5, 2022.
  5. Web site: AMD EPYC 7763 vs AMD EPYC 7702 [cpubenchmark.net] by PassMark Software ]. CPU Benchmark . April 5, 2022.
  6. Web site: Cutress . Ian . November 8, 2021 . AMD Gives Details on EPYC Zen4: Genoa and Bergamo, up to 96 and 128 Cores . AnandTech . en-US . April 5, 2022.
  7. Web site: Mujtaba . Hassan . February 28, 2021 . AMD EPYC Genoa CPU Platform Detailed - Up To 96 Zen 4 Cores, 192 Threads, 12-Channel DDR5-5200, 128 PCIe Gen 5 Lanes, SP5 'LGA 6096' Socket . Wccftech . en-US . April 5, 2022.
  8. Web site: servethehome . November 8, 2021 . AMD Bergamo to hit 128 Cores and Genoa at 96 Cores . ServeTheHome . en-US . April 5, 2022.
  9. Web site: Mujtaba . Hassan . January 10, 2022 . Another AMD EPYC Genoa 'Zen 4' CPU Leaks Out, This Time A 16 Core Chip With 2 Active CCDs . Wccftech . en-US . April 5, 2022.
  10. Web site: Smith . Ryan . AMD: EPYC "Genoa-X" CPUs With 1.1GB of L3 Cache Now Available . September 26, 2023 . www.anandtech.com.
  11. Web site: Kennedy . Patrick . July 19, 2023 . AMD EPYC Bergamo is a Fantastically Fresh Take on Cloud Native Compute . September 27, 2023 . ServeTheHome . en-US.
  12. Web site: Kennedy . Patrick . July 19, 2023 . AMD EPYC Bergamo is a Fantastically Fresh Take on Cloud Native Compute . September 26, 2023 . ServeTheHome . en-US.
  13. Web site: Kennedy . Patrick . September 18, 2023 . AMD EPYC 8004 Siena Launched for Lower Power EPYC Edge . September 26, 2023 . ServeTheHome . en-US.
  14. Web site: Cutress . Ian . May 27, 2019 . AMD Confirms Zen 4 EPYC Codename, and Elaborates on Frontier Supercomputer CPU . AnandTech . en-US . November 7, 2022.
  15. Web site: Bonshor . Gavin . June 9, 2022 . AMD Updated EPYC Roadmap: 5th Gen EPYC "Turin" Announced, Coming by End of 2024 . AnandTech . en-US . November 7, 2022.
  16. Web site: btarunr . June 10, 2022 . AMD Announces the "Zen 5" Microarchitecture and EPYC "Turin" Processor on 4nm . TechPowerUp . November 15, 2022.
  17. Web site: Shilov . Anthon . March 14, 2023 . AMD Rolls Out EPYC Embedded 9004 CPUs: Up to 96 Cores . Tom's Hardware . en-US . June 15, 2023.
  18. Web site: Shilov . Anthon . September 18, 2023 . AMD Launches EPYC 8004-Series 'Siena' CPUs: Up to 64 Zen 4c Cores . Tom's Hardware . en-US . September 18, 2023.
  19. News: Cutress . Ian . March 7, 2017 . AMD Prepares 32-Core Naples CPUs for 1P and 2P Servers: Coming in Q2 . AnandTech . en-US . March 7, 2017.
  20. News: Morris . John . March 13, 2018 . Inside GlobalFoundries' long road to the leading edge . ZDNet . en-US . July 17, 2019.
  21. News: Smith . Ryan . July 26, 2018 . AMD "Rome" EPYC CPUs to Be Fabbed By TSMC . AnandTech . en-US . June 18, 2019.
  22. Web site: Trader . Tiffany . March 21, 2022 . AMD Milan-X CPU with 3D V-Cache Available in Four SKUs, Up to 64-Cores . HPC Wire . en-US . May 6, 2022.
  23. News: Johnson . Renee . March 7, 2017 . AMD's Naples platform prepares to take Zen into the datacenter . Tech Report . en-US . March 7, 2017.
  24. News: De Gelas . Johan . Cutress . Ian . July 11, 2017 . Sizing Up the Servers: Intel's Skylake-SP Xeon vs AMD's EPYC 7000 . AnandTech . en-US . July 11, 2017.
  25. Web site: Sozzi . Brian . November 8, 2021 . Chipmaker AMD just scored a big deal with Meta . Yahoo! Finance . en-US . November 10, 2022.
  26. Web site: Kennedy . Patrick . November 22, 2022 . Gigabyte has a 48 DIMM 2P AMD EPYC Genoa GPU Server at SC22 . ServeTheHome . en-US . November 26, 2022.
  27. AMD Takes High-Performance Datacenter Computing to the Next Horizon . AMD . en-US . San Francisco, CA . November 6, 2018 . December 6, 2018.
  28. Web site: Ung . Gordon . November 7, 2018 . What AMD's 64-core 'Rome' server CPU tells us about Ryzen 2 . PCWorld . en-US . November 11, 2018.
  29. 2nd Gen AMD EPYC Processors Set New Standard for the Modern Datacenter with Record-Breaking Performance and Significant TCO Savings . AMD . en-US . Santa Clara, CA . August 7, 2019. August 8, 2019.
  30. Matthew . S. Smith . 2022 . Single-Chip Processors Have Reached Their Limits . IEEE Spectrum . 59 . 7 . 11 .
  31. Web site: Trader . Tiffany . AMD Launches Three New High-Frequency Epyc SKUs Aimed at Commercial HPC . www.hpcwire.com . April 14, 2020.
  32. News: Alcorn . Paul . October 5, 2019 . AMD dishes on Zen 3 and Zen 4 architecture, Milan and Genoa roadmap. Tom's Hardware . en-US . October 5, 2019.
  33. Web site: Trader . Tiffany . March 15, 2021 . AMD Launches Epyc 'Milan' with 19 SKUs for HPC, Enterprise and Hyperscale. HPC Wire . en-US . November 10, 2022.
  34. Web site: AMD EPYC 7003 "Milan-X" launches March 21st, specs and pricing leaked . VideoCardz . en-US . March 20, 2022 . March 25, 2022.
  35. Web site: Sandhu . Tarinder . March 21, 2022 . A deeper look into AMD Epyc 7003 Milan-X featuring 3D V-Cache . Club386 . en-US . November 10, 2022.
  36. Web site: Bonshor . Gavin . March 21, 2022 . AMD Releases Milan-X CPUs With 3D V-Cache: EPYC 7003 Up to 64 Cores and 768 MB L3 Cache . AnandTech . en-US . November 10, 2022.
  37. Web site: AMDs Exascale-Hammer: Epyc 3 mit 804 MByte Cache, Instinct MI200 mit 47,9 TFlops . c't Magazin . de . November 8, 2021 . November 10, 2022.
  38. Web site: Mujtaba . Hassan . November 10, 2022 . AMD 4th Gen EPYC 9004 "Genoa Zen 4" CPUs Launched: Up To 96 Cores, 192 Threads, 384 MB L3 Cache & Crushing All Other Server Chips . Wccftech . en-US . November 11, 2022.
  39. Web site: Lee . Jane Lanhee . Mehta . Cahvi . November 10, 2022 . AMD launches data center CPU 'Genoa', taps Google, Microsoft as customers . Reuters . en-US . November 11, 2022.
  40. Web site: Burt . Jeffrey . November 10, 2022 . The Acute Role Reversal for AMD and Intel in Datacenter Compute . The Next Platform . en-US . November 11, 2022.
  41. Web site: Alcorn . Paul . November 10, 2022 . AMD 4th-Gen EPYC Genoa 9654, 9554, and 9374F Review: 96 Cores, Zen 4 and 5nm Disrupt the Data Center . Tom's Hardware . en-US . November 11, 2022.
  42. Web site: AMD Expands 4th Gen EPYC CPU Portfolio with Leadership Processors for Cloud Native and Technical Computing Workloads . amd.com . June 14, 2023 . Santa Clara, California . June 13, 2023.
  43. Web site: AMD Completes 4th Gen EPYC Family with the AMD EPYC 8004 Processors, Purpose Built for Cloud Services, Intelligent Edge and Telco . amd.com . September 18, 2023 . Santa Clara, California . June 13, 2023.
  44. Web site: Alcorn . Paul . AMD announces 3nm EPYC Turin with 192 cores and 384 threads — 5.4X faster than Intel Xeon in AI work, launches second half of 2024 . Tom's Hardware . 17 June 2024 . en . 3 June 2024.
  45. Web site: AMD EPYC Turin CPUs have been pictured, up to 128 Zen5 or 192 Zen5c cores . VideoCardz.com . 17 June 2024 . 17 December 2023.
  46. Web site: Smith . Ryan . AMD Announces Zen 5-based EPYC “Turin” Processors: Up to 192 Cores, Coming in H2’2024 . www.anandtech.com . 17 June 2024 . 3 June 2024.
  47. News: Alcorn . Paul . February 21, 2018 . AMD Launches Ryzen Embedded V1000, EPYC Embedded 3000 Processors . Tom's Hardware . en-US . April 5, 2018.
  48. News: Alcorn . Paul . July 6, 2018 . China Finds Zen: Begins Production Of x86 Processors Based On AMD's IP . Tom's Hardware . en-US . July 9, 2018.
  49. News: Larabel . Michael . June 9, 2018 . Hygon Dhyana: Chinese x86 Server CPUs Based On AMD Zen . Phoronix . en-US . July 9, 2018.
  50. Web site: Cutress . Ian . Wilson . Wendell . February 27, 2020 . Testing a Chinese x86 CPU: A Deep Dive into Zen-based Hygon Dhyana Processors . AnandTech . en-US . September 29, 2020.