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List of AMD CPU microarchitectures

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The following is a list of AMD CPU microarchitectures.

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Transcription

Nomenclature

Historically, AMD's CPU families were given a "K-number" (which originally stood for Kryptonite,[1] an allusion to the Superman comic book character's fatal weakness) starting with their first internal x86 CPU design, the K5, to represent generational changes. AMD has not used K-nomenclature codenames in official AMD documents and press releases since the beginning of 2005, when K8 described the Athlon 64 processor family. AMD now refers to the codename K8 processors as the Family 0Fh processors. 10h and 0Fh refer to the main result of the CPUID x86 processor instruction. In hexadecimal numbering, 0F(h) (where the h represents hexadecimal numbering) equals the decimal number 15, and 10(h) equals the decimal number 16. (The "K10h" form that sometimes pops up is an improper hybrid of the "K" code and Family XXh identifier number.)

Family number Name
Decimal Hex (h)
05 05h K6
06 06h K7
15 0Fh K8 / Hammer
16 10h K10
17 11h K8 & K10 "hybrid"
18 12h K10 (Llano) / K12 (ARM-based)
20 14h Bobcat
21 15h Bulldozer / Piledriver / Steamroller / Excavator
22 16h Jaguar / Puma
23 17h Zen / Zen+ / Zen 2
24 18h Hygon Dhyana
25 19h Zen 3 / Zen 3+ / Zen 4
26 1Ah Zen 5

The Family hexadecimal identifier number can be determined for a particular processor using the freeware system profiling application CPU-Z, which shows the Family number in the Ext. Family field of the application, as can be seen on various screenshots on the CPU-Z Validator World Records website.

x86 microarchitectures

Below is a list of microarchitectures many of which have codenames associated:[2]

Other microarchitectures

See also

References

  1. ^ Hesseldahl, Arik (2000-07-06). "Why Cool Chip Code Names Die". forbes.com. Retrieved 2007-07-14.
  2. ^ "List of AMD CPU microarchitectures - LeonStudio". LeonStudio - CodeFun. 3 August 2014. Retrieved 12 September 2015.
  3. ^ "AMD Unveils 'Chiplet' Design Approach: 7nm Zen 2 Cores Meet 14 nm I/O Die". AnandTech. 2018-11-06. Retrieved 2020-10-12.
  4. ^ "AMD Launches AMD Ryzen 5000 Series Desktop Processors: The Fastest Gaming CPUs in the World" (Press release). Santa Clara, California: Advanced Micro Devices, Inc. 2020-10-08. Retrieved 2020-10-12.
  5. ^ "AMD Zen 4 processors could destroy Intel thanks to their 5nm designs". TechRadar. 2020-03-25. Retrieved 2020-12-10.
  6. ^ "AMD confirms Zen4 & Ryzen 7000 series lineup: Raphael in 2022, Dragon Range and Phoenix in 2023". videocardz.com. May 3, 2022.

External links

This page was last edited on 7 September 2023, at 10:12
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