Cooper Lake is Intel's codename for the third-generation of their Xeon Scalable processors, developed as the successor to Cascade Lake-SP. Cooper Lake processors are targeted at the 4S and 8S segments of the server market; Ice Lake-SP serves the 1S and 2S segment.[1][2][3]
General information | |
---|---|
Launched | June 18, 2020 |
Marketed by | Intel |
Designed by | Intel |
Common manufacturer |
|
Product code | 80706 |
Performance | |
Max. CPU clock rate | 4.3 |
Cache | |
L1 cache | 64 KB per core (32 instructions + 32 data) |
L2 cache | 1 MB per core |
L3 cache | Up to 38.5 MB (1.375 MB/core) |
Architecture and classification | |
Application | 4S and 8S servers |
Technology node | 14 nm (Tri-Gate) transistors |
Microarchitecture | Skylake |
Instruction set | x86-64 |
Instructions | MMX, SSE, SSE2, SSE3, SSSE3, SSE4, SSE4.1, SSE4.2, AVX, AVX2, FMA3, AVX-512, bfloat16 |
Extensions | |
Physical specifications | |
Cores |
|
Socket | |
Products, models, variants | |
Product code name |
|
Model |
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Brand name |
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History | |
Predecessor | Cascade Lake |
Successors | Same generation
Next generation |
Support status | |
Supported |
Features
editCooper Lake was launched on June 18, 2020 and features up to 28 cores.[4] Aside from a few microarchitectural changes, Cooper Lake's microarchitecture is mostly identical to Skylake.[5] Cooper Lake features faster memory support (DDR4-3200 over DDR4-2933), support for second-generation Optane memory, and double the UPI links over Cascade Lake.[1] Cooper Lake is the first x86 CPU to support the new bfloat16
instruction set as a part of Intel's Deep Learning Boost (DPL).
Improvements
editList of Cooper Lake processors
editXeon Platinum (octa processor)
editModel number[7] |
sSpec number |
Cores (threads) |
Frequency | Turbo Boost all-core/2.0 (/max. 3.0) |
L2 cache |
L3 cache |
TDP | Socket | I/O bus | Memory | Release date | Part number(s) |
Release price (USD)
|
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Xeon Platinum 8380HL |
|
28 (56) | 2.9 GHz | ?/4.3 GHz | 28 × 1 MB | 38.5 MB | 250 W
|
LGA 4189 | 6× 10.4 GT/s UPI | 6× DDR4-3200 | 18 June 2020 |
|
$13,012 |
Xeon Platinum 8380H |
|
28 (56) | 2.9 GHz | ?/4.3 GHz | 28 × 1 MB | 38.5 MB | 250 W
|
LGA 4189 | 6× 10.4 GT/s UPI | 6× DDR4-3200 | 18 June 2020 |
|
$10,009 |
Xeon Platinum 8376HL |
|
28 (56) | 2.6 GHz | ?/4.3 GHz | 28 × 1 MB | 38.5 MB | 205 W
|
LGA 4189 | 6× 10.4 GT/s UPI | 6× DDR4-3200 | 18 June 2020 |
|
$11,722 |
Xeon Platinum 8376H |
|
28 (56) | 2.6 GHz | ?/4.3 GHz | 28 × 1 MB | 38.5 MB | 205 W
|
LGA 4189 | 6× 10.4 GT/s UPI | 6× DDR4-3200 | 18 June 2020 |
|
$8719 |
Xeon Platinum 8360HL |
|
24 (48) | 3 GHz | ?/4.2 GHz | 24 × 1 MB | 33 MB | 225 W
|
LGA 4189 | 6× 10.4 GT/s UPI | 6× DDR4-3200 | 1 September 2020 |
|
$7203 |
Xeon Platinum 8360H |
|
24 (48) | 3 GHz | ?/4.2 GHz | 24 × 1 MB | 33 MB | 225 W
|
LGA 4189 | 6× 10.4 GT/s UPI | 6× DDR4-3200 | 1 September 2020 |
|
$4200 |
Xeon Platinum 8356H |
|
8 (16) | 3.9 GHz | ?/4.4 GHz | 8 × 1 MB | 35.75 MB | 190 W
|
LGA 4189 | 6× 10.4 GT/s UPI | 6× DDR4-2933 | 1 September 2020 |
|
$3400 |
Xeon Platinum 8354H |
|
18 (36) | 3.1 GHz | ?/4.3 GHz | 18 × 1 MB | 24.75 MB | 205 W
|
LGA 4189 | 6× 10.4 GT/s UPI | 6× DDR4-3200 | 18 June 2020 |
|
$3500 |
Xeon Platinum 8353H |
|
18 (36) | 2.5 GHz | ?/3.8 GHz | 18 × 1 MB | 24.75 MB | 150 W
|
LGA 4189 | 6× 10.4 GT/s UPI | 6× DDR4-3200 | 18 June 2020 |
|
$3003 |
Xeon Gold (quad processor)
editModel number[7] |
sSpec number |
Cores (threads) |
Frequency | Turbo Boost all-core/2.0 (/max. 3.0) |
L2 cache |
L3 cache |
TDP | Socket | I/O bus | Memory | Release date | Part number(s) |
Release price (USD)
|
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Xeon Gold 6348H |
|
24 (48) | 2.3 GHz | ?/4.2 GHz | 24 × 1 MB | 33 MB | 165 W
|
LGA 4189 | 6× 10.4 GT/s UPI | 6× DDR4-2933 | 18 June 2020 |
|
$2700 |
Xeon Gold 6330H |
|
24 (48) | 2 GHz | ?/3.7 GHz | 24 × 1 MB | 33 MB | 150 W
|
LGA 4189 | 6× 10.4 GT/s UPI | 6× DDR4-2933 | 1 September 2020 |
|
$1894 |
Xeon Gold 6328HL |
|
16 (32) | 2.8 GHz | ?/4.3 GHz | 16 × 1 MB | 22 MB | 165 W
|
LGA 4189 | 6× 10.4 GT/s UPI | 6× DDR4-2933 | 18 June 2020 |
|
$4779 |
Xeon Gold 6328H |
|
16 (32) | 2.8 GHz | ?/4.3 GHz | 16 × 1 MB | 22 MB | 165 W
|
LGA 4189 | 6× 10.4 GT/s UPI | 6× DDR4-2933 | 18 June 2020 |
|
$1776 |
Xeon Gold 5320H |
|
20 (40) | 2.4 GHz | ?/4.2 GHz | 20 × 1 MB | 27.5 MB | 150 W
|
LGA 4189 | 6× 10.4 GT/s UPI | 6× DDR4-2666 | 18 June 2020 |
|
$1555 |
Xeon Gold 5318H |
|
18 (36) | 2.5 GHz | ?/3.8 GHz | 18 × 1 MB | 24.75 MB | 150 W
|
LGA 4189 | 6× 10.4 GT/s UPI | 6× DDR4-2666 | 18 June 2020 |
|
$1273 |
References
edit- ^ a b "Intel Launches Cooper Lake With New AI, Increased Bandwidth, 2nd Gen Optane – ExtremeTech". www.extremetech.com. Retrieved 2020-08-22.
- ^ Anton Shilov; Ian Cutress. "Intel Server Roadmap: 14nm Cooper Lake in 2019, 10nm Ice Lake in 2020". Retrieved 2018-09-03.
- ^ servethehome (2020-03-16). "Intel Cooper Lake Rationalized Still Launching 1H 2020". ServeTheHome. Retrieved 2021-04-16.
- ^ Cutress, Dr Ian. "Intel Launches Cooper Lake: 3rd Generation Xeon Scalable for 4P/8P Servers". www.anandtech.com. Retrieved 2020-06-18.
- ^ Morgan, Timothy Prickett (2020-06-18). "Taking A Deep Dive Into "Cooper Lake" Xeon SP Processors". The Next Platform. Retrieved 2021-04-16.
- ^ "Intel Launches Cooper Lake: 3rd Generation Xeon Scalable for 4P/8P Servers". Anandtech. 2020-06-18.
- ^ a b "3rd Generation Intel® Xeon® Scalable Processors Product Specifications". ark.intel.com. Retrieved 2020-06-22.