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* 47,212,207 transistors
 
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* 24.2 mm² die size
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* 24.18 mm² die size
 
* packaged in a Halide-Free 441 ball, 14 mm x 13 mm µFCBGA
 
* packaged in a Halide-Free 441 ball, 14 mm x 13 mm µFCBGA
  

Revision as of 23:58, 31 March 2017

Edit Values
Bonnell µarch
General Info
Arch TypeCPU
DesignerIntel
ManufacturerIntel
IntroductionMarch 2, 2008
Phase-out2011
Process45 nm
Core Configs1, 2
Pipeline
TypeSuperscalar
SpeculativeNo
Reg RenamingNo
Stages16-19
Instructions
ISAx86-32, x86-64
ExtensionsMOVBE, MMX, SSE, SSE2, SSE3, SSSE3
Cache
L1I Cache32 KiB/Core
8-way set associative
L1D Cache24 KiB/Core
6-way set associative
L2 Cache512 KiB/Core
8-way set associative
Cores
Core NamesSilverthorne,
Diamondville,
Lincroft,
Pineview,
Tunnel Creek,
Stellarton,
Sodaville,
Groveland
Succession

Bonnell was a microarchitecture for Intel's 45 nm ultra-low power microprocessors first introduced in 2008 for their then-new Atom family. Bonnell, which was named after the highest point in Austin - Mount Bonnell, was Intel's first x86-compatible microarchitecture designed to target the ultra-low power market.

Bonnell (project Silverthorne then) was designed by a then-new low-power design team Intel created at their Texas Development Center in Austin in 2004 along with a new chipset (Poulsbo) design team. The design team was led by Elinora Yoeli. While Yoeli previously worked at her native country, Bonnell was a US design and was unconnected to any of Intel's projects worked on by the Israel Design Center in Haifa. Previously Yoeli led the Israeli team in the development of Pentium M.

Codenames

Chipset Platform PHC Core Target
Poulsbo Menlow Silverthorne MIDs
Poulsbo Menlow Diamondville Nettops
Moorestown Langwell Lincroft MIDs
Pine Trail Tiger Point Pineview Nettops
Queens Bay Topcliff Tunnel Creek Embedded
Queens Bay Topcliff Stellarton Embedded + Altera FPGA
Sodaville CE
Groveland CE

Generation successor

First Generation Second Generation
Silverthorne Lincroft
Diamondville Pineview
Tunnel Creek
Stellarton
Sodaville
Groveland

Release Dates

The Atom family was officially announced on March 2, 2008 under the Intel Atom and Intel Centrino Atom brands. Bonnell was first introduced on April 2nd 2008 during the Intel Developers Forum in Shanghai.

Process Technology

45 nm Manufacturing Fabs
Fab Location
D1D Hillsboro, Oregon
Fab 32 Chandler, Arizona
Fab 28 Kiryat Gat, Israel

Bonell is designed to be manufactured using a 45 nm process. Intel's 45 nm process is the first high-volume manufacturing process to introduce High-k + metal gate transistors.

intel 45nm transistor.png
Bonnell
45 nm
Gate Pitch 180 nm
Interconnect Pitch 160 nm
SRAM bit cell (HD)​ 0.346 µm²
SRAM bit cell (LP)​ 0.3816 µm²

Compiler support

Compiler Arch-Specific Arch-Favorable
GCC -march=bonnell -mtune=bonnell
LLVM -march=bonnell -mtune=bonnell
Visual Studio /arch:SSE3

Architecture

Silverthorne processor next to a penny.

Bonnell features a brand new architecture not based on any previous Intel design. The architecture was specifically designed for ultra-mobile PCs (UMPCs), mobile internet devices (MID), and other embedded devices. Bonnell's primary goals were:

  1. Reduce power consumption,
  2. while staying fully x86-compatible,
  3. at acceptable performance

Performance/Power new rule: +1% performance for at most +1% power consumption.

Architecture

  • Strictly ultra-low power
  • 45 nm process, 9 metal layers, CMOS
  • 500 mW to 2 W TDP
    • Average 220 mW
    • Idle under 80 mW
  • 533 MT/s dual mode (GTL & CMOS) FSB
  • In-order
  • 2-issue decode
  • Simple 2-way SMT
  • Instruction Queue of 32 entries (16 entries/thread)
  • FP Register File (per thread)
  • Integer Register File (per thread)
  • Private L1 cache for each core
  • Shared L2 cache for the entire chip

The number of functional units were kept to minimum to cut on power consumption.

  • 2 address generation units (AGUs)
  • 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)

Memory Hierarchy

  • Cache
    • Hardware prefetchers
    • C6 cache
      • 10.5 KiB array to hold the architectural state during deep power down state
      • 1-read, 1-write ported
    • L1 Instruction Cache
      • 36 KiB
      • 1 read and 1 write port
      • 8 transistors (instead of 6) to reduce voltage
      • 1-bit pairty (but no ECC)
    • L1 Data Cache
      • 24 KiB
        • 6-way set associative
      • 1 read and 1 write port
      • 8 transistors (instead of 6) to reduce voltage
      • 1-bit pairty (but no ECC)
      • Per core
    • L2 Cache:
      • 512 KiB 8-way set associative
      • ECC support
      • Shrinkable from 512 KiB to 128 KiB (2-way)
      • 64-bit cache line
      • Per core
    • Tag/LRU/State bit
      • All in one array
      • Tag + data = 4.5 KiB + 17.5 KiB
    • L3 Cache:
      • No level 3 cache
    • RAM
      • Maximum of 2 GiB, 4 GiB, and 8 GiB

Note that the L1 cache for data and instructions were originally both 32 KiB (8-way), however due to power restrictions, the L1d$ was later reduced to 24 KiB.

  • TLB
    • ITLB
      • 32-entry
      • fully associative
    • DTLB
      • 4 KiB PAges
        • 64-entry TLB
          • 4-way set associative
        • 16-entry micro-TLB
          • fully associative
          • duplicated for each thread
        • 16-entry PDE cache
          • fully associative
      • Large Pages
        • 8 entries, 4-way set associative

Block Diagram

bonnell block diagram.svg

Overview

Bonnell's architecture shares very little in common with other Intel designs. To achieve the strict ultra-low power objects, Bonnell features a very slimmed own design discarding many high-performance techniques used by Intel's high-performance architectures such as aggressive speculative execution, out-of-order execution, and µop transformation.

Part of the design requirement was that Bonnell retain full x86 compatibility, up to the latest extension - at the 10th of the power consumption of the Pentium M. This meant any software is now 100% compatible but it forced engineers to deal with all the baggage the architecture brought along. The decision to offer full compatibility brought its own set of benefits such as access to the largest software code base in the world, including the ability to run any other x86 operating system unmodified. At the same time it forced the design team to resort to other means of reducing power.

Up to Bonnell, all of Intel's existing architectures put very low priority on power efficiency (note that this has significantly changed since the introduction of Sandy Bridge). High-performance, high-throughput, complex designs are simply inadequate for the kind of power goals required out of Bonnell, even if they were trimmed down. It was decided that Bonnel would be designed from the scratch with power goals in mind. For those reasons Bonnell resembles the P5 microarchitecture.

Pipeline

Much like the original P5 microarchitecture, Bonnell consists of an in-order dual-issue pipeline. The pipeline is shown below. Note the pipeline is duplicated for dual-issue execution.


bonnell pipeline.svg


Unlike P5, which only had 5 stages, Bonnell has 16 to 19 stages pipeline. The longer pipeline allows a more evenly spreading of heat across the chip with more units. This also allows a higher clock rate.

Front End

Bonnell's front end is very simple when compared to Intel's high-performance architectures. Out-of-order execution (OoOE) that is found ubiquitously in all HPC architectures was rejected. Bonnell's power and area constraints simply couldn't allow for the complex logic needed to support that capability. The Instruction Fetch consists of 3 stages capable going through up to 16 bytes per cycle. Like fetch, the Instruction Decode is also 3 stages capable of decording instructions with up to 3 prefixes each cycle (considerably longer for more complex instructions).

Bonnell is a departure from all modern x86 architectures with respect to decoding (including those developed by AMD and VIA and every Intel architecture since P6). Whereas modern architectures transform complex x86 instructions into a more easily digestible µop form, Bonnell does almost no such transformations. The pipeline is tailored to execute regular x86 instructions as single atomic operations consisting of a single destination register and up to three source-registers (typical load-operate-store format). Most instructions actually correspond very closely to the original x86 instructions. This design choice results in lower complexity but at the cost of performance reduction. Bonnell has two identical decoders capable of decoding complex x86 instructions. Being variable length instruction architecture introduces an additional layer of complexity. To assist the decoders, Bonnell implements predecoders that determine instruction boundaries and mark them using a single-bit marker. Two cycles are allocated for predecoding as well as L1 storage. Boundary marks are also stored in the L1 eliminating the need to preform needlessly redundant predecoding. Repeated operations are retrieved pre-marked eliminating two cycles. Bonnel has a 36 KiB L1 instruction cache consisting of 32 KiB instruction cache and 4 KiB instruction boundary mark cache. All instructions (coming from both cache or predecode) must undergo full decode. It's worthwhile noting that Intel states Bonnell is a 16-stage pipeline because for the most part, after a cache hit you'll have 16 stages. This is also true in some cases where the processor can simultaneously decode the next instruction. However, in the cases where you get a miss, it will cost 3 additional stages to catch up and locate the boundary for that instruction for a total of 19 stages.

Some x86 instructions are simply too complex to handle directly. Those selected few get diverted into the micro-code sequencer ROM (MSROM) for decoding producing much more sane RISCish instructions at the cost of 2 additional cycles. Intel estimates that only 5% of common software require instructions to be split up. Only decoder0 can request transfer to use the MSROM. All instructions longer than 8 bytes or instructions having more than three prefixes will result in a MSROM transfer unconditionally. Those instructions will experience two cycles of delay. The inability to execute things out-of-order eliminates lots of optimization opportunities at this stage. One thing Bonnell can do is lockstep instructions that can be execute simultaneously such as in the case of instructions that performance a memory access along an arithmetic operation. In those instances Bonnell will issue the instruction as if it were two separate instructions executing simultaneously. In addition, only one x87 instruction can be decoded per cycle.

Because Bonnell has support for Hyper-Threading, Intel's brand name for their own simultaneous multithreading technology, a number of modifications had to be done. The prefetch buffer and the instruction queue have been duplicated for each thread.

Branch predictor

No aggressive speculative execution is done in Bonnell, however it does implements a light-weight Gshare branch predictor consisting of a two-level adaptive predictor with a 12-bit global history table. The pattern history table has 4096 entries and is competitively shared between threads. The branch buffer target has 128 entries (4-way by 32 sets). While unconditional jumps are not recorded in the table, always-taken and never-taken jumps do.

The branch-misprediction penalty is 11 to 13 cycles. Some of the rare or complex x86 instructions will detour into a microcode sequencer for decoding, necessitating two additional clock cycles. Additionally there is a roughly 7 cycle penalty for correctly predicted branches but no target can be predicted because of a missing branch target buffer (BTB) entry. Bonnell return stack buffer is 8-entry deep.

Back End

Each cycle two instructions are dispatched in-order. The scheduler can take a pair of instructions from a single thread or across threads. Bonnell in-order back-end resembles a traditional early 90s design featuring a dual ALU, a dual FPU and a dual AGU. Similarly to the front-end, in order to accommodate simultaneous multithreading, the Bonnell design team chose to duplicate both the floating-point and integer register files. The duplication of the register files allows Bonnell to perform context switching on each stage by maintaining duplicate states for each thread. The decision to duplicate this logic directly results in more transistors and larger area of the silicon. Overall implementing SMT still required less power and less die area than the other heavyweight alternatives (i.e., out-of-order and larger superscaler). Nonetheless the total register file area accounts for 50% of the entire core's die area which was single-handedly an important contributor to the overall chip power consumption.

FP/SIMD execution Cluster
SIMD/FP Execution Cluster Ports
Port 0 Port 1
SIMD ALU
(128-bit / 64-bit int)
SIMD ALU
(128-bit)
Shuffle unit
(128-bit / 64-bit int)
FP Adder
SIMD/FP multiply unit
(128-bit / 64-bit int)
Divide unit (support IMUL, IDIV)

In the further pursuit of power saving specialized execution units were minimized as much as possible. Bonnell's floating point & SIMD execution cluster does most of the heavy lifting. It features a 128 bit SIMD integer path containing 2 SIMD ALUs and 1 shuffle unit. Bonnell's SIMD integer multiplier and floating point divider are also responsible for the scalar integer multiply and integer divider operations. Additionally the cluster includes a 64 bit FP & SIMD integer multipliers and a 128 bit FP adder.

Additionally, this cluster contains a Safe Instruction Recognition (SIR) unit responsible for supporing out-of-order commits. The idea behind the SIR unit is fairly simple, when conditions are met (i.e, when there are no inter-dependency between varying latency instructions) the two instructions will execute simultaneously allowing the shorter latency instruction to execute and finish before a possibly longer latency floating point operation ends. This algorithm reduces needless stalls that plagues traditional in-order pipelines.

Integer Execution Cluster
SIMD/FP Execution Cluster Ports
Port 0 Port 1
Load/Store Jump unite and LEA
ALU0 ALU1
Shift/Rotate unit Bit processing unit

The integer execution cluster contains two ALUs, a shifter, and a jump execution unit capable of performing single-cycle 64 bit integer operations. The Integer cluster has store-forwarding support allowing for a 0-cycle latency effective load-to-use.

Memory Subsystem

Bonnell has two address generation units (AGUs). For data, there is 24 KiB write-back L1 cache with a 2-level DTLB hierarchy, hardware page walker, and an integer store-to-load forwarding support. Additionally, there is a rather large 512 KiB L2 cache with inline ECC and hardware pre-fetchers. The tag, LRU, and the state bits are all stored in a single array to minimize area. The tag and data consist of 8 4.5 KiB tag sub arrays and 32 17.5 KiB data sub-arrays made of 256 cells on the bit line and 136 cells on the write line.

As a power-saving feature, the L2 cache can be configured down to 2-way dynamically (i.e. programmatically) for applications that do not require the full performance. Doing so reduces the power and downsizes the cache to 128 KiB. Additionally, for less demanding tasks, the Bonnell power gates unused ways. It's interesting to note that the design team placed the TAG blocks at the bottom of the DATA arrays allowing, in theory, to expend the L2 to 1 MiB should they want to.

I/O Bus

dual-mode fsb driver.png
Main article: Front-Side Bus

Traditionally, Intel has been using AGTL+ transceivers (Advanced Gunning Transceiver Logic) for their front-side bus communication. With bonnell (and the chipset) Intel also introduced a CMOS signaling logic mode. CMOS has the advantage of only drawing power during transition. The switch to CMOS saves 200-500 mW at the cost of worse latency and slower bus which ranges from 400 to 533 MHz. Bonnell's intended applications is not heavy processing machine, the lower bus speed was likely a worthy compromise.

Bonnell implements both mode, so designers who prefer the faster bus can opt for the traditional AGTL+ transceivers while those who seek low power can opt for the CMOS implementation. Intel offers both types by simply fusing the appropriate circuitry. This is done by reprogramming the NFET control pull-down and the PFET control accordingly, activating or deactivating the resistor and switching the voltage.

bonnell split power planes.png

Note that during deep sleep, the design team designed the power rails using two power planes. To further save power, only keeping 21 pins are kept alive, reducing the average power by another 10% while killing off 182 of the other I/O which are not necessary for that state.

Features

Multithreading

Bonnell supports Intel's Hyper-Threading, their marketing term for their own implementation of simultaneous multithreading. The notion of implementing simultaneous multithreading on such a low-power architecture might seem unusual at first. In fact, it's one of only a handful of ultra-low power architectures to support such feature. Intel justified this design choice by demonstrating that performance enjoys an uplift of anywhere from 30% to 50% while worsening power consumption by up to 20% (with an average of 30% performance increase for 15% more power). The toll on the die area was a mere 8%.

In the front-end, the prefetch buffer and the instruction queue have been duplicated for each thread, everything else is competitively shared between the threads. In the back-end, only the integer and floating register files are duplicated, everything else is competitively shared as well. Note that both threads compete over the L1 instruction and data caches as well as the L2 and the TLBs with the exception of a 16-entry micro-TLB that's duplicated for each thread.

Low-power features

bonnell c-states.png

Bonnell implements a number of features to enhance battery life including several lower power states (C-states). Bonnell is capable of achieving 2 GHz core frequency at 1 V and can go down all the way to 600 MHz at 0.75 V though down-dialing the core phase-lock-loop (PLL) ratio. Bonnell supports up to C6 C-state where more power saving is achieving with higher C-state which in term means more components (i.e., features) are turned off.

• C-0 state, the processor can operate at its highest frequency (in high-frequency mode (HFM)) and in its lowest frequency (low frequency mode (LFM)).
• C-1 state, the core is power-gated and the L1 caches are flushed, yielding lower dynamic power; exit latency is sub-1µs
• C-4 state, the PPLs are shut down down as well, exit latency is in the order of 30 µs
• C-6 state, the state of the machine is kept alive in a 10.5 KiB register file (SRAM kept at VCC of 0.3 V) with the core power is completely shut off; exit latency in the order of 100 µs

Intel estimates C-6 residency to be between 80% and 90% resulting in an average power in the order of 220 mW. Likewise Idle power, which is dominated by leakage power of the functional units, is below 80 mW.

Modularity

Bonnell is a highly modular architecture with almost all features disableable via built-in fuses allowing for many binning variation. Both virtualization support (VT-x/d) and Hyper-Threading may be disabled to cut on power. Bonnell implements both AGTL+ and CMOS transceiver logic for the front-side bus signaling with either one capable of being fused off. CMOS signaling allows for lower power but cannot reach the high bug speeds that AGTL+ can. This may or maybe not be a restriction that system designers might face.

Die

Silverthorne

  • 45 nm process
  • 9 metal layers
  • 47,212,207 transistors
  • 3.1 mm x 7.8 mm
  • 24.18 mm² die size
  • packaged in a Halide-Free 441 ball, 14 mm x 13 mm µFCBGA

Silverthorne die shot.jpg

Silverthorne die shot 2.jpg

Silverthorne die shot (marked).png

Function Unit Blocks (FUBs):

  • BIC/BIU - Bus Interface Cluster/Unit
  • MEC - Memory Cluster Execution & L1d$
  • FPC - FP/SIMD execution Cluster
  • IEC - Integer Execution Cluster
  • FEC - Front-End Cluster & L1i$
  • FSB - Front Side Bus

Physical layout

bonnell die size areas.svg
bonnell die size areas 2.svg

The Atom design team was considerably smaller than Intel's typical design teams which forced them to work in a slightly different way. The design team used a methodology they described as a "sea of Functional Unit Block" (FUBs) where by all cluster hierarchies (including unit-level hierarchies) are flattened at the chip level. This development methodology allowed for faster iteration. The various FUB designs were divided among the team members allowing them to handle the design in a more manageable way. All in all, Bonnell's physical database consisted of 205 unique FUBs interlinked via 41,000 FUB-to-FUB interconnects. Bonnell is manufactured on Intel's 45 nm process. 91% of the FUBs using pre-characterized standard cells (45% structured data-path and 46% fully synthesized random logic blocks) with only the remaining 9% being full-custom blocks. The unusually high utilization of standard cells (at least for Intel) is likely due to the limited resources given to the Bonnell design team.

Type Unique Instances
Random Logic Synthesized 92 92
Structured Data Paths 88 140
L2 sub-arrays 2 40
Custom 18 19
Repeater Station - 317
Total 200 608
Cluster Transistor Count
Core 13,828,574
Uncore 2,738,951
L2 & L2 tag 30,644,682
Total 47,212,207

Cores

First Generation

First generation of Bonnell-based microprocessors introduced 2 cores: Silverthorne for ultra-mobile PCs and mobile Internet devices (MIDs) and Diamondville for ultra cheap notebooks and desktops.

Silverthorne

Main article: Silverthorne

Silverthorne was the codename for a series of Mobile Internet Devices (MIDs) introduced in 2008. These processors had 1 core and 2 threads with a FSB operating at 400 MHz-533 MHz.

Diamondville

Main article: Diamondville

Diamondville was the codename for the series of ultra cheap notebooks and desktops introduced in 2008. Diamondville is very much a soldered-on-motherboard derivative of Silverthorne with faster FSB (operating at 533 MHz - 667 MHz). The dual-core version is an MCM (Multi Chip Module) Silverthorne variant.

Second Generation

First generation of Bonnell-based microprocessors while being low power had to work with the older 90 nm process 945GSE chipset and 82801GBM I/O controller with a TDP of almost 9.5 watts - almost 4 times that of the processor itself. Second generation Bonnell-based microprocessors aimed to address this issue by integrating a memory controller and GPU on-chip. This drastically reduced power consumption and cost.

Lincroft

Main article: Lincroft

Lincroft is the codename for Bonnell-based Silverthorne's successor. Lincroft integrates on-die the graphics and memory controller.

Pineview

Main article: Pineview

Pineview was the codename for second generate Bonnell-based processors which integrated a memory controller, Direct Media Interface (DMI) link, and the GMA 3150 GPU. Pineview is the successor for Diamondville, targeting the same ultra cheap desktops, nettops and netbooks.

Tunnel Creek

Main article: Tunnel Creek

Tunnel Creek was the codename for a series of MPUs for embedded applications.

Stellarton

Main article: Stellarton

Stellarton was the codename for a series of MPUs for embedded applications. Stellarton is the Tunnel Creek core packaged with an Altera FPGA.

Sodaville

Main article: Sodaville

Sodaville is the codename for a series of consumer electronics system on a chip (e.g. set-top box).

Groveland

Main article: Groveland

Groveland is the codename for a series of consumer electronics MPUs (e.g. smart TVs).

All Bonnell Chips

Bonnell Chips
CPUIGP
ModelµarchPlatformCoreLaunchedSDPFreqMax MemNameFreqMax Freq
230BonnellNettop 2008Diamondville3 June 20081,599.99 MHz
1.6 GHz
1,599,990 kHz
8,192 MiB
8,388,608 KiB
8,589,934,592 B
8 GiB
0.00781 TiB
330BonnellNettop 2008Diamondville21 September 20081,599.99 MHz
1.6 GHz
1,599,990 kHz
8,192 MiB
8,388,608 KiB
8,589,934,592 B
8 GiB
0.00781 TiB
N270BonnellNettop 2008Diamondville3 June 20081,599.99 MHz
1.6 GHz
1,599,990 kHz
8,192 MiB
8,388,608 KiB
8,589,934,592 B
8 GiB
0.00781 TiB
N280BonnellNettop 2008Diamondville7 February 20091,666.66 MHz
1.667 GHz
1,666,660 kHz
8,192 MiB
8,388,608 KiB
8,589,934,592 B
8 GiB
0.00781 TiB
Z500BonnellMenlowSilverthorne2 April 20080.96 W
960 mW
0.00129 hp
9.6e-4 kW
800 MHz
0.8 GHz
800,000 kHz
Z510BonnellMenlowSilverthorne2 April 20080.96 W
960 mW
0.00129 hp
9.6e-4 kW
1,100 MHz
1.1 GHz
1,100,000 kHz
Z510PBonnellMenlowSilverthorne2 March 20091,100 MHz
1.1 GHz
1,100,000 kHz
Z510PTBonnellMenlowSilverthorne2 March 20091,100 MHz
1.1 GHz
1,100,000 kHz
Z515BonnellMenlowSilverthorne8 April 20091,200 MHz
1.2 GHz
1,200,000 kHz
Z520BonnellMenlowSilverthorne2 April 20080.96 W
960 mW
0.00129 hp
9.6e-4 kW
1,333.33 MHz
1.333 GHz
1,333,330 kHz
Z520PTBonnellMenlowSilverthorne2 March 20091,333.33 MHz
1.333 GHz
1,333,330 kHz
Z530BonnellMenlowSilverthorne2 April 20081,599.99 MHz
1.6 GHz
1,599,990 kHz
Z530PBonnellMenlowSilverthorne2 March 20091,599.99 MHz
1.6 GHz
1,599,990 kHz
Z540BonnellMenlowSilverthorne2 April 20080.96 W
960 mW
0.00129 hp
9.6e-4 kW
1,866.66 MHz
1.867 GHz
1,866,660 kHz
Z550BonnellMenlowSilverthorne8 April 20091,999.99 MHz
2 GHz
1,999,990 kHz
Z560BonnellMenlowSilverthorneJune 20102,133.33 MHz
2.133 GHz
2,133,330 kHz
Z600BonnellMoorestownLincroft4 May 2010800 MHz
0.8 GHz
800,000 kHz
1,024 MiB
1,048,576 KiB
1,073,741,824 B
1 GiB
9.765625e-4 TiB
PowerVR SGX535200 MHz
0.2 GHz
200,000 KHz
Z605BonnellMoorestownLincroft4 May 20101,000 MHz
1 GHz
1,000,000 kHz
2,048 MiB
2,097,152 KiB
2,147,483,648 B
2 GiB
0.00195 TiB
PowerVR SGX535400 MHz
0.4 GHz
400,000 KHz
Z610BonnellMoorestownLincroft4 May 2010800 MHz
0.8 GHz
800,000 kHz
2,048 MiB
2,097,152 KiB
2,147,483,648 B
2 GiB
0.00195 TiB
PowerVR SGX535400 MHz
0.4 GHz
400,000 KHz
Z612BonnellMoorestownLincroft4 May 2010900 MHz
0.9 GHz
900,000 kHz
2,048 MiB
2,097,152 KiB
2,147,483,648 B
2 GiB
0.00195 TiB
PowerVR SGX535400 MHz
0.4 GHz
400,000 KHz
Z615BonnellMoorestownLincroft4 May 20101,200 MHz
1.2 GHz
1,200,000 kHz
2,048 MiB
2,097,152 KiB
2,147,483,648 B
2 GiB
0.00195 TiB
PowerVR SGX535400 MHz
0.4 GHz
400,000 KHz
Z620BonnellMoorestownLincroft4 May 2010900 MHz
0.9 GHz
900,000 kHz
2,048 MiB
2,097,152 KiB
2,147,483,648 B
2 GiB
0.00195 TiB
PowerVR SGX535400 MHz
0.4 GHz
400,000 KHz
Z625BonnellMoorestownLincroft4 May 20101,500 MHz
1.5 GHz
1,500,000 kHz
2,048 MiB
2,097,152 KiB
2,147,483,648 B
2 GiB
0.00195 TiB
PowerVR SGX535400 MHz
0.4 GHz
400,000 KHz
Z650BonnellOak TrailLincroft11 April 20111,200 MHz
1.2 GHz
1,200,000 kHz
2,048 MiB
2,097,152 KiB
2,147,483,648 B
2 GiB
0.00195 TiB
PowerVR SGX535400 MHz
0.4 GHz
400,000 KHz
Z670BonnellOak TrailLincroft11 April 20111,500 MHz
1.5 GHz
1,500,000 kHz
2,048 MiB
2,097,152 KiB
2,147,483,648 B
2 GiB
0.00195 TiB
PowerVR SGX535400 MHz
0.4 GHz
400,000 KHz

Artwork

References

  • Some information was obtained directly from Intel
  • Gerosa, Gianfranco, et al. "A sub-2 W low power IA processor for mobile internet devices in 45 nm high-k metal gate CMOS." IEEE Journal of Solid-State Circuits 44.1 (2009): 73-82.
  • Gerosa, Gianfranco, et al. "A sub-1W to 2W low-power IA processor for mobile internet devices and ultra-mobile PCs in 45nm hi-κ metal gate CMOS." Solid-State Circuits Conference, 2008. ISSCC 2008. Digest of Technical Papers. IEEE International. IEEE, 2008.
  • Taufique, Mohammed H., et al. "A 512-KB level-2 cache design in 45-nm for low power IA processor silverthorne." Custom Integrated Circuits Conference, 2008. CICC 2008. IEEE. IEEE, 2008.
  • Wang, Perry H., et al. "Intel® atom™ processor core made FPGA-synthesizable." Proceedings of the ACM/SIGDA international symposium on Field programmable gate arrays. ACM, 2009.
  • Corporation, Intel. "Intel 64 and IA-32 architectures optimization reference manual." (2009).
codenameBonnell +
core count1 + and 2 +
designerIntel +
first launchedMarch 2, 2008 +
full page nameintel/microarchitectures/bonnell +
instance ofmicroarchitecture +
instruction set architecturex86-32 + and x86-64 +
manufacturerIntel +
microarchitecture typeCPU +
nameBonnell +
phase-out2011 +
pipeline stages (max)19 +
pipeline stages (min)16 +
process45 nm (0.045 μm, 4.5e-5 mm) +