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Intel 2020 Xeon CPU Family Detailed – 2S Ice Lake-SP With 8 Channel Memory on Whitley & 4S Cooper Lake-SP With 6 Channel Memory on Cedar Island Platforms


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It's been a while since we last heard about Intel's 2020 Xeon CPU family which will include Ice Lake-SP and Cooper Lake-SP lineups. Today, there are new details to talk about regarding both lineups as revealed in the latest slides by tech leakers Komachi and Momomo_US. The reported slides are from an internal briefing on Intel's Barlow Pass, 2nd Generation Optane DC Persistent memory & the other are from CISCO which lists down a few Xeon 2S blade servers configurations.

 

Intel faces some serious competition in 2020 as AMD gets ready to launch its 3rd Generation EPYC platform by the end of this year. Intel, on the other hand, would be introducing two key lineups in its Xeon family, the 14nm Cooper Lake, and the 10nm Ice Lake. Intel's 2020 Xeon family had to be pushed back as reported earlier which means that they will be pitted right against AMD's 3rd Gen EPYC Milan CPUs based on the new Zen 3 core architecture. There have been recent performance leaks for the Xeon family which show some hopeful results but we have to wait and see what Intel really has in its hands for the Server, HPC and Data Center segment.With that said, let's talk about what Intel has planned out for its 2020 Xeon lineup. The Intel 2020 lineup would come in two distinct platforms, one is called Cedar Island and the other is known as Whitley. Whitley would come in as a 2-Socket configuration for both Cooper Lake-SP and Ice Lake-SP processors. The Cedar Island platform, on the other hand, will enable 4-Socket configurations but would only feature Cooper Lake-SP CPUs.

 

As illustrated in the diagram above, the Whitley platform would feature 8 channel memory. From previously leaked slides, it was reported that Ice Lake-SP and Cooper Lake-SP would get 8-channel memory on the Whitley platform but the slide above shows Ice Lake chips specifically featuring four 2 channel IMCs whereas we Cooper Lake-SP on Cedar Island only features two 3-channel IMCs. It is highly likely that Cooper Lake-SP configurations for Whitley would get the same 4x2-channel IMC configuration as Ice Lake-SP and it's just not shown here.The 2nd Gen Optane DC Persistent memory would be supported on both platforms (Barlow Pass), offering up to 3200 MT/s and 15% bandwidth improvement in a 15W DIMM. Whitley would be able to support up to 3200 MT/s and 4 TB capacity per socket whereas Cedar Island would feature 2933 MT/s speeds and 3 TB capacity per socket. It is also stated that Barlow Pass DIMMs would feature a new blue-colored DIMM heat spreader for better identification in the data center. With the Xeon 2020 platforms detailed, the following is a look at what to expect from the Xeon CPU lineups.

 

Intel Ice Lake-SP processors will be available in the third quarter of 2020 and will be based on the 10nm+ process node. We have seen earlier slides say that the Ice Lake family would feature up to 28 cores but the one from ASUS's presentation says that it would actually feature up to 38 cores & 76 threads per socket.

The main highlight of Ice Lake-SP processors will be support for PCIe Gen 4 and 8-channel DDR4 memory. The Ice Lake Xeon family would offer up to 64 PCIe Gen 4 lanes and would offer support for 8-channel DDR4 memory clocked at 3200 MHz (16 DIMM per socket with 2nd Gen Persistent memory support). Intel Ice Lake Xeon processors would be based on the brand new Sunny Cove core architecture which delivers an 18% IPC improvement versus the Skylake core architecture that has been around since 2015.

 

Moving on to the Intel Cooper Lake Xeon CPU family which is based on the 14nm+++ process node, we are looking at up to 48 cores and 96 threads in a socketed design. The current Cascade Lake-SP family offers up to 28 cores in socketed variants while the Cascade Lake-AP SKUs which come in BGA only, offer up to 56 cores and 112 threads with TDPs as high as 400W.

There will also be a 56 core and 112 thread socketed variant in the Cooper Lake family but that is likely to be part of the Xeon-AP line of chips which feature two dies on the same interposer. In a similar fashion, the BGA and LGA parts in the Ice Lake-AP family could also feature more cores than the SP part but they will be dual-die design and not a single monolithic chip like the ones mentioned here. Also, the 38 core configuration for Ice Lake Xeon doesn't make sense since that means there have to be two 19 core dies and the 19 core config itself isn't something that Intel has done before.

 

Intel's Sapphire Rapids-SP and Granite Rapids-SP Xeon families for the Eagle Stream platform were also detailed a while back and would bring on the post 10nm era for Intel's Xeon segment, offering new capabilities such as PCIe 5.0 and DDR5 memory along with the new Golden and Willow Cove cores that are expected to further leverage Intel's IPC lead in the server market. 

The Xeon Scalable family was very recently refreshed, further confirming the reports of delays we heard regarding Intel's Cooper Lake and Ice Lake Xeon CPUs which have been pushed back by up to 3 months due to various instability issues. This would further increase the pressure on Intel as their 10nm and 14nm Xeon processors would be directly competing against AMD's 7nm+ EUV based EPYC Milan lineup which is going to feature the brand new Zen 3 core architecture which is confirmed to be one of AMD's biggest architectural upgrade since the original Zen core.

 

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