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POWER9 succeeds {{\\|POWER8}}, introducing many core enhancements as well as large architectural changes. POWER9 has taken a highly modular design approach, with the same design supporting up to 12 [[physical cores|cores]] with 96 [[logical cores|threads]] (SMT8) or up to 24 cores with 96 threads (SMT4). IBM offers POWER9 as both [[scale up]] and [[scale out]] solutions. In total, there are four targeted chip implementations (24C/SO, 24C/SU, 12C/SO, and 12C/SU).
 
POWER9 succeeds {{\\|POWER8}}, introducing many core enhancements as well as large architectural changes. POWER9 has taken a highly modular design approach, with the same design supporting up to 12 [[physical cores|cores]] with 96 [[logical cores|threads]] (SMT8) or up to 24 cores with 96 threads (SMT4). IBM offers POWER9 as both [[scale up]] and [[scale out]] solutions. In total, there are four targeted chip implementations (24C/SO, 24C/SU, 12C/SO, and 12C/SU).
  
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=== Variations ===
 
POWER9 comes in two flavors - [[scale out]] (SO) and [[scale up]] (SU). The scale out variations are designed for traditional datacenter clusters utilizing [[uniprocessor|single-socket]] and [[multiprocessor|dual-socket]] setups. The Scale-Up variations are designed for [[NUMA]] servers with four or more sockets, supporting large amounts of memory capacity and throughput.  
 
POWER9 comes in two flavors - [[scale out]] (SO) and [[scale up]] (SU). The scale out variations are designed for traditional datacenter clusters utilizing [[uniprocessor|single-socket]] and [[multiprocessor|dual-socket]] setups. The Scale-Up variations are designed for [[NUMA]] servers with four or more sockets, supporting large amounts of memory capacity and throughput.  
  
=== Scale out ===
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==== Scale out ====
 
[[File:power9 so overview.svg|right|thumb|Scale-out overview]]
 
[[File:power9 so overview.svg|right|thumb|Scale-out overview]]
 
For the scale out there are two variations, a [[12-core]] SMT8 model and a [[24-core]] SMT4 model. The SMT4 is optimized for the Linux ecosystem whereas the SMT8 model is said to be optimized for the [[PowerVM]] ecosystem ({{ibm|AIX}} / {{ibm|IBM i}} customers). Those models support up to 8 channels of [[DDR4]] memory for up to 4 [[TiB]] of DDR4-2667 memory (per socket). Those models offer up to 120 GiB/s of sustained bandwidth.
 
For the scale out there are two variations, a [[12-core]] SMT8 model and a [[24-core]] SMT4 model. The SMT4 is optimized for the Linux ecosystem whereas the SMT8 model is said to be optimized for the [[PowerVM]] ecosystem ({{ibm|AIX}} / {{ibm|IBM i}} customers). Those models support up to 8 channels of [[DDR4]] memory for up to 4 [[TiB]] of DDR4-2667 memory (per socket). Those models offer up to 120 GiB/s of sustained bandwidth.
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Scale out processors have 48 {{ibm|PowerAXON}} lines (x48) and come with two [[SMP links]].
 
Scale out processors have 48 {{ibm|PowerAXON}} lines (x48) and come with two [[SMP links]].
  
=== Scale up ===
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==== Scale up ====
 
[[File:power9 su overview.svg|right|thumb|Scale-up overview]]
 
[[File:power9 su overview.svg|right|thumb|Scale-up overview]]
 
The POWER9 [[scale up]] is designed for their enterprise servers and come with two variations, a [[12-core]] SMT8 model and a [[24-core]] SMT4 model. The SMT4 is optimized for Linux Ecosystem whereas the SMT8 is said to be optimized for the [[PowerVM]] Ecosystem community ({{ibm|AIX}} / {{ibm|IBM i}} customers). POWER9 inherits the same buffered memory architecture first introduced with {{\\|POWER8}}. POWER9 has two memory controllers capable of driving four differential memory interface (DMI) channels, each with a maximum signaling rate of 9.6 GT/s for a sustained bandwidth of up to 28.8 GB/s. Each of the DMI channels connects to one dedicated {{ibm|Centaur}} memory buffer chip which, in turn, provides four DDR4 memory channels running at up to 3200 MT/s as well as 16 MiB of L4 cache. All in all, POWER9 scale-up can use eight buffered memory channels to access up to 32 channels of DDR memory and provides an additional 128 MiB of level 4 cache.
 
The POWER9 [[scale up]] is designed for their enterprise servers and come with two variations, a [[12-core]] SMT8 model and a [[24-core]] SMT4 model. The SMT4 is optimized for Linux Ecosystem whereas the SMT8 is said to be optimized for the [[PowerVM]] Ecosystem community ({{ibm|AIX}} / {{ibm|IBM i}} customers). POWER9 inherits the same buffered memory architecture first introduced with {{\\|POWER8}}. POWER9 has two memory controllers capable of driving four differential memory interface (DMI) channels, each with a maximum signaling rate of 9.6 GT/s for a sustained bandwidth of up to 28.8 GB/s. Each of the DMI channels connects to one dedicated {{ibm|Centaur}} memory buffer chip which, in turn, provides four DDR4 memory channels running at up to 3200 MT/s as well as 16 MiB of L4 cache. All in all, POWER9 scale-up can use eight buffered memory channels to access up to 32 channels of DDR memory and provides an additional 128 MiB of level 4 cache.

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codenamePOWER9 +
core count24 +, 4 +, 8 +, 12 +, 16 + and 20 +
designerIBM +
first launchedAugust 2017 +
full page nameibm/microarchitectures/power9 +
instance ofmicroarchitecture +
instruction set architecturePower ISA v3.0B +
manufacturerGlobalFoundries +
microarchitecture typeCPU +
namePOWER9 +
phase-out2020 +
pipeline stages (max)16 +
pipeline stages (min)12 +
process14 nm (0.014 μm, 1.4e-5 mm) +