From WikiChip
Difference between revisions of "cavium"
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* {{\\|ThunderX}} | * {{\\|ThunderX}} | ||
* {{\\|ThunderX2}} | * {{\\|ThunderX2}} | ||
+ | * {{\\|ThunderX3}} | ||
== Microarchitectures == | == Microarchitectures == | ||
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* {{cavium|ThunderX1|l=arch}} | * {{cavium|ThunderX1|l=arch}} | ||
* {{cavium|Vulcan|l=arch}} | * {{cavium|Vulcan|l=arch}} | ||
+ | * {{cavium|Triton|l=arch}} | ||
== Other Chips == | == Other Chips == |
Revision as of 12:55, 7 December 2018
Cavium | |||||||||
Type | Public | ||||||||
Founded | November, 2000 | ||||||||
Founder | M. Raghib Hussain Syed Ali | ||||||||
Headquarters | San Jose, CA | ||||||||
Website | http://www.cavium.com | ||||||||
|
Cavium, Inc. (formerly Cavium Networks) is an American fabless semiconductor company that specializes in ARM and MIPS microprocessors for networking devices in enterprise, data centers, and IoT gateways.
On November 20 2017, Marvell announced they will be acquiring Cavium in a $6 billion deal. This was completed July 6, 2018.
Processors
Microarchitectures
Other Chips
Acquisitions
- January 6, 2006: Menlo Logic LLC
Facts about "Cavium"
company type | public + |
founded | November 2000 + |
founder | M. Raghib Hussain + and Syed Ali + |
full page name | cavium + |
headquarters | San Jose, CA + |
instance of | semiconductor company + |
name | Cavium + |
website | http://www.cavium.com + |
wikidata id | Q5055187 + |