X-Gene | |
Developer | AppliedMicro |
Manufacturer | TSMC |
Type | Microprocessors |
Introduction | October 28, 2011 (announced) 2012 (launch) |
ISA | ARM |
µarch | Storm, Shadowcat, Skylark |
Word size | 64 bit 8 octets
16 nibbles |
Process | 40 nm 0.04 μm , 28 nm4.0e-5 mm 0.028 μm , 16 nm2.8e-5 mm 0.016 μm
1.6e-5 mm |
Technology | CMOS |
Clock | 2.4 GHz-3.3 GHz |
Succession | |
→ | |
eMAG |
X-Gene was a family of 64-bit ARM server microprocessors designed and introduced by AppliedMicro.
Overview
X-Gene was a family of high-performance multi-core ARM microprocessors first announced by AppliedMicro in 2011. Unlike their traditional product offering, X-Gene directly targeted high-performance data center servers, a market predominantly dominated by Intel Xeon processors. AppliedMicro introduced two generations of server processors based on their own custom ARM microarchitectures - Storm and Shadowcat. Those two generations shipped a total of 25,000 units. In late 2016, MACOM acquired AppliedMicro resulting in the shelving of third-generation X-Gene based on the Skylake microarchitecture. The X-Gene intellectual property including most of the design team was eventually sold to Ampere Computing has rebranded the design and improved on it under the eMAG brand.
Members
X-Gene 1
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X-Gene 2
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X-Gene 3
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See also
Bibliography
- David Schor. (February 5, 2018). "X-Gene 3 gets a second chance at Ampere with a new 32-core 16nm ARM processor".
designer | AppliedMicro + |
first announced | October 28, 2011 + |
first launched | 2012 + |
full page name | apm/x-gene + |
instance of | microprocessor family + |
instruction set architecture | ARM + |
main designer | AppliedMicro + |
manufacturer | TSMC + |
microarchitecture | Storm +, Shadowcat + and Skylark + |
name | X-Gene + |
process | 40 nm (0.04 μm, 4.0e-5 mm) +, 28 nm (0.028 μm, 2.8e-5 mm) + and 16 nm (0.016 μm, 1.6e-5 mm) + |
technology | CMOS + |
word size | 64 bit (8 octets, 16 nibbles) + |