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{{intel title|Saltwell|arch}} | {{intel title|Saltwell|arch}} | ||
{{microarchitecture | {{microarchitecture | ||
| − | | atype | + | | atype = CPU |
| name = Saltwell | | name = Saltwell | ||
| designer = Intel | | designer = Intel | ||
| Line 17: | Line 17: | ||
| speculative = No | | speculative = No | ||
| renaming = No | | renaming = No | ||
| − | | isa | + | | isa = x86-64 |
| − | |||
| stages = 16 | | stages = 16 | ||
| issues = 2 | | issues = 2 | ||
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| successor link = intel/microarchitectures/silvermont | | successor link = intel/microarchitectures/silvermont | ||
}} | }} | ||
| − | '''Saltwell''' was a [[microarchitecture]] for [[Intel]]'s [[32 nm]] ultra-low power | + | '''Saltwell''' was a [[microarchitecture]] for [[Intel]]'s [[32 nm]] ultra-low power system on chips first introduced in late 2011 for the {{intel|Atom}} family. Saltwell is a shrink of {{intel|Bonnell}} which also incorporated all support chips on-die. Saltwell, unlike its predecessor was aimed directly at smartphones (as opposed to MIDs). |
== Codenames == | == Codenames == | ||
{| class="wikitable" | {| class="wikitable" | ||
|- | |- | ||
| − | ! | + | ! Core !! Platform !! Target |
|- | |- | ||
| − | | {{intel| | + | | {{intel|Penwell|l=core}} || {{intel|Medfield|l=platform}} || Smartphones (MID) |
|- | |- | ||
| − | | {{intel| | + | | {{intel|Cedarview|l=core}} || {{intel|Cedar Trail|l=platform}} || Netbooks (NB) |
|- | |- | ||
| − | | {{intel| | + | | {{intel|Cloverview|l=core}} || {{intel|Clover Trail|l=platform}} || Tablets (TAB) |
|- | |- | ||
| − | | {{intel| | + | | {{intel|Centerton|l=core}} || {{intel|Bordenville|l=platform}} || Microservers (MS) |
|- | |- | ||
| − | | {{intel| | + | | {{intel|Briarwood|l=core}} || {{intel|Bordenville|l=platform}} || Microservers (MS) |
|- | |- | ||
| − | | {{intel| | + | | {{intel|Berryville|l=core}} || {{intel|Berryville|l=platform}} || Set-tops box (CE) |
| − | |||
| − | |||
|- | |- | ||
|} | |} | ||
| + | |||
| + | === Cores === | ||
| + | * {{intel|Penwell|l=core}} - SoCs specifically for smartphones | ||
| + | * {{intel|Cedarview|l=core}} - SoCs for netbooks | ||
| + | * {{intel|Cloverview|l=core}} - SoCs for tablets | ||
| + | * {{intel|Centerton|l=core}} - SoCs for Microservers; added support for Intel VT and ECC memory | ||
| + | * {{intel|Briarwood|l=core}} - SoCs for Microservers | ||
| + | * {{intel|Berryville|l=core}} - SoCs for consumer electronics (e.g. set-tops) | ||
| + | |||
| + | == All Saltwell Chips == | ||
| + | <!-- NOTE: | ||
| + | This table is generated automatically from the data in the actual articles. | ||
| + | If a microprocessor is missing from the list, an appropriate article for it needs to be | ||
| + | created and tagged accordingly. | ||
| + | |||
| + | Missing a chip? please dump its name here: http://en.wikichip.org/wiki/WikiChip:wanted_chips | ||
| + | --> | ||
| + | <table class="wikitable sortable"> | ||
| + | <tr><th colspan="11" style="background:#D6D6FF;">Saltwell Chips</th></tr> | ||
| + | <tr><th colspan="8">CPU</th><th colspan="3">IGP</th></tr> | ||
| + | <tr><th>Model</th><th>µarch</th><th>Platform</th><th>Core</th><th>Launched</th><th>SDP</th><th>Freq</th><th>Max Mem</th><th>Name</th><th>Freq</th><th>Max Freq</th></tr> | ||
| + | {{#ask: [[Category:microprocessor models by intel]] [[microarchitecture::Saltwell]] | ||
| + | |?full page name | ||
| + | |?model number | ||
| + | |?microarchitecture | ||
| + | |?platform | ||
| + | |?core name | ||
| + | |?first launched | ||
| + | |?sdp | ||
| + | |?base frequency | ||
| + | |?max memory | ||
| + | |?integrated gpu | ||
| + | |?integrated gpu base frequency | ||
| + | |?integrated gpu max frequency | ||
| + | |format=template | ||
| + | |template=proc table 2 | ||
| + | |userparam=12 | ||
| + | |mainlabel=- | ||
| + | }} | ||
| + | </table> | ||
== Architecture == | == Architecture == | ||
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** 13 stages for miss prediction | ** 13 stages for miss prediction | ||
** 7 stages for correct prediction but missing [[branch target buffer]] (BTB) | ** 7 stages for correct prediction but missing [[branch target buffer]] (BTB) | ||
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Latest revision as of 17:09, 20 December 2025
| Edit Values | |
| Saltwell µarch | |
| General Info | |
| Arch Type | CPU |
| Designer | Intel |
| Manufacturer | Intel |
| Introduction | 2011 |
| Phase-out | 2013 |
| Process | 32 nm |
| Core Configs | 1, 2 |
| Pipeline | |
| Type | Superscalar, Superpipeline |
| Speculative | No |
| Reg Renaming | No |
| Stages | 16 |
| Instructions | |
| ISA | x86-64 |
| Extensions | MOVBE, MMX, SSE, SSE2, SSE3, SSSE3 |
| Cache | |
| L1I Cache | 32 KiB/Core 8-way set associative |
| L1D Cache | 24 KiB/Core 6-way set associative |
| L2 Cache | 512 KiB/Cores 8-way set associative |
| Cores | |
| Core Names | Penwell, Cedarview, Cloverview, Centerton, Briarwood, Berryville |
| Succession | |
Saltwell was a microarchitecture for Intel's 32 nm ultra-low power system on chips first introduced in late 2011 for the Atom family. Saltwell is a shrink of Bonnell which also incorporated all support chips on-die. Saltwell, unlike its predecessor was aimed directly at smartphones (as opposed to MIDs).
Contents
Codenames[edit]
| Core | Platform | Target |
|---|---|---|
| Penwell | Medfield | Smartphones (MID) |
| Cedarview | Cedar Trail | Netbooks (NB) |
| Cloverview | Clover Trail | Tablets (TAB) |
| Centerton | Bordenville | Microservers (MS) |
| Briarwood | Bordenville | Microservers (MS) |
| Berryville | Berryville | Set-tops box (CE) |
Cores[edit]
- Penwell - SoCs specifically for smartphones
- Cedarview - SoCs for netbooks
- Cloverview - SoCs for tablets
- Centerton - SoCs for Microservers; added support for Intel VT and ECC memory
- Briarwood - SoCs for Microservers
- Berryville - SoCs for consumer electronics (e.g. set-tops)
All Saltwell Chips[edit]
| Saltwell Chips | ||||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| CPU | IGP | |||||||||
| Model | µarch | Platform | Core | Launched | SDP | Freq | Max Mem | Name | Freq | Max Freq |
Architecture[edit]
Saltwell's primary goals were:
- Improve on Bonnell by getting rid of older support chips
- Add enhancements using 32 nm process while transitioning to 22 nm
- Improve GPU, power
- Burst frequencies
Key changes from Bonnell[edit]
- L2$ increase rate
- L2$ now seperate rail
- New low-power SRAM for machine state
- Larger instruction fetch
- Double the size of the branch prediction history table
Memory Hierarchy[edit]
- Cache
- Hardware prefetchers
- L1 Cache:
- 32 KiB 8-way set associative instruction
- 1 read and 1 write port
- 24 KiB 6-way set associative data
- 1 read and 1 write port
- 8 transistors (instead of 6) to reduce voltage
- Per core
- 32 KiB 8-way set associative instruction
- L2 Cache:
- 512 KiB 8-way set associative
- ECC
- Shrinkable from 512 KiB to 128 KiB (2-way)
- 32B/cycle and 32 outstanding cache requests
- separate voltage rail, fixed @ 1.05V
- Per core
- L3 Cache:
- No level 3 cache
- Non-Cache Shared State Memory
- 256 KiB low-power SRAM
- separate voltage plane
- always-on block that stores architectural states while in various power saving modes
- RAM
- Maximum of 1 GiB, 2 GiB, and 4 GiB
- dual 32-bit channels, 1 or 2 ranks per channel
Functional Units[edit]
The number of functional units were kept to minimum to cut on power consumption.
- 2 Integer ALUs (1 for jumps, 1 for shifts)
- 2 FP ALUs (1 adder, 1 for others)
- No Integer multiplier & divider (shared with FP ALU instead)
Pipeline[edit]
Saltwell has an almost identical pipeline to Bonnell's with a 16-stage pipeline with a 13-stage miss penalty. It's also still a dual-issue superscalar but with in-order execution. Reordering logic is was still omitted due to power and area restrictions.
The longer pipeline allows a more evenly spreading of heat across the chip with more units. This also allows a higher clock rate.
- Instruction Fetch
- 3 stages
- 48 Bytes/Cycle (lower if SMT)
- Instruction Decode
- 3 stages
- Instructions with up to 3 prefixes/Cycle
- Instruction Dispatch
- 2 stages
- Source Operand Read
- 1 stage
- reading register operand
- 1 stage
- Data Cache Access
- 3 stages
- 1 stage for calculating
- 2 stages for reading cache
- 3 stages
- Execution
- 2 clusters
- integers
- quick cache access due to direct connection
- floating point & SIMD
- integers
- 2 clusters
- Exception & MT Handling
- 2 stages
- Commit
- 1 stage
Multithreading[edit]
Saltwell has support for multithreading - up to two threads per core. However each thread compete for the same resources which does inherently means they run slower than they would if they were to run alone.
Branch Prediction[edit]
- Two-level adaptive predictor
- 12-bit branch history register
- Pattern history table has 8192 entries (shared between threads), twice that of Bonnell
- Branch buffer target has 128 entries (4-way, 32 sets)
- Unconditional jumps are ignored
- Always-taken and never-taken are marked in the table
- Penalties:
- 13 stages for miss prediction
- 7 stages for correct prediction but missing branch target buffer (BTB)
| codename | Saltwell + |
| core count | 1 + and 2 + |
| designer | Intel + |
| first launched | 2011 + |
| full page name | intel/microarchitectures/saltwell + |
| instance of | microarchitecture + |
| instruction set architecture | IA-32 + and x86-64 + |
| manufacturer | Intel + |
| microarchitecture type | CPU + |
| name | Saltwell + |
| phase-out | 2013 + |
| pipeline stages | 16 + |
| process | 32 nm (0.032 μm, 3.2e-5 mm) + |