Thursday, April 18th 2024

Intel Prepares 500-Watt Xeon 6 SKUs of Granite Rapids and Sierra Forest

Intel is preparing to unveil its cutting-edge Xeon 6 series server CPUs, known as Granite Rapids and Sierra Forest. These forthcoming processors are set to deliver a significant boost in performance, foreshadowing a new era of computing power, albeit with a trade-off in increased power consumption. Two days ago, Yuuki_Ans posted information about the Beechnut City validation platform. Today, he updated the X thread with more information that Intel is significantly boosting core counts across its new Xeon 6 lineup. The flagship Xeon 6 6980P is a behemoth, packing 128 cores with a blistering 500 Watt Thermal Design Power (TDP) rating. In fact, Intel is equipping five of its Xeon 6 CPUs with a sky-high 500 W TDP, including the top four Granite Rapids parts and even the flagship Sierra Forest SKU, which is composed entirely of efficiency cores. This marks a substantial increase from Intel's previous Xeon Scalable processors, which maxed out at 350-385 Watts.

The trade-off for this performance boost is a dramatic rise in power consumption. By nearly doubling the TDP ceiling, Intel can double the core count from 64 to 128 cores on its Granite Rapids CPUs, vastly improving its multi-core capabilities. However, this focus on raw performance over power efficiency means server manufacturers must redesign their cooling solutions to accommodate Intel's flagship 500 W parts adequately. Failure to do so could lead to potential thermal throttling issues. Intel's next-gen Xeon CPU architectures are shaping up to be one of the most considerable generational leaps in recent memory. Still, they come with a trade-off in power consumption that vendors and data centers will need to address. Densely packing thousands of these 500-Watt SKUs will lead to new power and thermal challenges, and we wait to see future data center projects utilizing them.
Sources: Yuuki_Ans (on X), via Tom's Hardware
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27 Comments on Intel Prepares 500-Watt Xeon 6 SKUs of Granite Rapids and Sierra Forest

#26
Warigator
SOAREVERSORWhen your customers are Amazon, Microsoft, facebook, Oracle, and all the others who do real work not idiotic video games these things make sense.
Companies and businesses, which are in the "real work" of offering lots of people stuff they often don't need and addicting people to their services, not helping them much.

The important and concerning truth is, that true happines and fulfillment comes from playing good and finished video games with good friends together.

Spending time with well-made video games of your own choice is in other words choosing your own way of the spending time that you actually enjoy.

Making lots of money is just succumbing to society's pressures of being a "succesful person". I especially dislike cryptocurrencies people. Greed, greed, greed. Awful.
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#27
DavidC1
Minus InfinityWhat all core frequency are we getting for 128 P cores to ONLY be at 500W? I mean it's infinitely better than cRaptor Lake's energy efficiency (out of the box) and I doubt Epyc Turin with 128 Zen 5 cores will much less either.
Turin is also going to 500-600W TDP. They know with increasing compute demand coming at the same time with ever decreasing Moore's Law benefits, TDP increase is needed.
Tropick...good lord, wasn't Sierra Forest supposed to be targeted at efficiency or something? What with it being made entirely out of E-cores?
Efficiency doesn't mean low power. Otherwise, something like a Raspberry Pi would be the "most efficient". Efficiency is a relative unit of measurement.

In this case, efficiency = performance per unit of watt. These Sierra Forest Xeons should be very high efficiency, one of the highest if not highest.
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