General information | |
---|---|
Launched | May 15, 2012 |
Common manufacturer | |
Architecture and classification | |
Technology node | 32 nm SOI GF |
Instruction set | AMD64 (x86-64) |
Physical specifications | |
Sockets |
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Products, models, variants | |
Core names | |
History | |
Predecessor | Bulldozer - Family 15h |
Successor | Steamroller - Family 15h (3rd-gen) |
Support status | |
iGPU unsupported |
AMD Piledriver Family 15h is a microarchitecture developed by AMD as the second-generation successor to Bulldozer. It targets desktop, mobile and server markets. It is used for the AMD Accelerated Processing Unit (formerly Fusion), AMD FX, and the Opteron line of processors.
The changes over Bulldozer are incremental. Piledriver uses the same "module" design. Its main improvements are to branch prediction and FPU/integer scheduling, along with a switch to hard-edge flip-flops to improve power consumption. This resulted in clock speed gains of 8–10% and a performance increase of around 15% with similar power characteristics.[1] FX-9590 is around 40% faster than Bulldozer-based FX-8150, mostly because of higher clock speed.[citation needed]
Products based on Piledriver were first released on 15 May 2012 with the AMD Accelerated Processing Unit (APU), code-named Trinity, series of mobile products.[2] APUs aimed at desktops followed in early October 2012 with Piledriver-based FX-series CPUs released later in the month.[3][4] Opteron server processors based upon Piledriver were announced in early December 2012.[5]