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The System Agent (SA) is a centralized peripheral device integration unit. It contains what was previously the traditional [[Memory Controller Hub]] (MCH) which includes all the I/O such as the [[PCIe]], {{intel|DMI}}, and others. Additionally the SA incorporates the [[memory controller]] and the display engine which works in tandem with the integrated graphics. The major enabler for the new System Agent is in fact the [[32 nm process]] which allowed for considerably higher integration, over a dozen [[clock domain]]s and [[PHY]]s.
 
The System Agent (SA) is a centralized peripheral device integration unit. It contains what was previously the traditional [[Memory Controller Hub]] (MCH) which includes all the I/O such as the [[PCIe]], {{intel|DMI}}, and others. Additionally the SA incorporates the [[memory controller]] and the display engine which works in tandem with the integrated graphics. The major enabler for the new System Agent is in fact the [[32 nm process]] which allowed for considerably higher integration, over a dozen [[clock domain]]s and [[PHY]]s.
  
The System Agent interfaces with the rest of the system via the ring in a similar manner to the cache boxes in the LLC slices. It is also in charge of handling I/O to cache coherency. The System Agent enables [[direct memory access]] (DMA), which allows devices to snoop the cache hierarchy. Address conflicts resulting from multiple concurrent requests associated with the same cache line are also handled by the System Agent.
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The system agent interfaces with the rest of the system via the ring in a similar manner to the cache boxes in the LLC slices. It is also in charge of handling I/O to cache coherency. The SA enables [[direct memory access]] (DMA) allows devices to snoop the cache hierarchy. Address conflicts resulting from multiple concurrent requests associated with the same cache line are also handled by the SA.
  
 
[[File:sandy bridge power overview.svg|275px|left]]
 
[[File:sandy bridge power overview.svg|275px|left]]
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==== <span style="float: right;">Power</span> ====
 
==== <span style="float: right;">Power</span> ====
With Sandy Bridge, Intel introduced a large number of power features to save powers depending on the workload, temperature, and what I/O is being utilized. The new power features are handled at the System Agent. Sandy Bridge introduced a fully-fledged Power Control Unit (PCU). The root concept for this unit started with {{\\|Nehalem}} which embedded a discrete microcontroller on-die which handled all the power management related tasks in firmware. The new PCU extends on this functionality with numerous state machines and firmware algorithms. The use of firmware, which Intel Fellow Opher Kahn described at IDF 2010, contains 1000s of lines of code to handle very complex power management tasks. Intel uses firmware to be able to fine-tune chips post-silicon as well as fix problems to extract the best performance.
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With Sandy Bridge, Intel introduced a large number of power features to save powers depending on the workload, temperature, and what's I/O is being utilized. The new power features are handled at the System Agent. Sandy Bridge introduced a fully-fledged Power Control Unit (PCU). The root concept for this unit started with {{\\|Nehalem}} which embedded a discrete microcontroller on-die which handled all the power management related tasks in firmware. The new PCU extends on this functionality with numerous state machines and firmware algorithms. The use of firmware, which Intel Fellow Opher Kahn described at IDF 2010, contains 1000s of lines of code to handle very complex power management tasks. Intel uses firmware to be able to fine-tune chips post-silicon as well as fix problems to extract the best performance.
  
 
Sandy Bridge has three separate voltage domains: System Agent, Cores, and Graphics. Both the Cores and Graphics are variable voltage domains. Both of those domains are able to scale up and down with voltage and frequency based on controls from the Power Control Unit. The cores and graphics scale up and down depending on the workloads in order to deliver instantaneous performance boost through higher frequency whenever possible. The System Agent sits on a third power plane which is low voltage (especially on mobile devices) in order to consume as little power as necessary.
 
Sandy Bridge has three separate voltage domains: System Agent, Cores, and Graphics. Both the Cores and Graphics are variable voltage domains. Both of those domains are able to scale up and down with voltage and frequency based on controls from the Power Control Unit. The cores and graphics scale up and down depending on the workloads in order to deliver instantaneous performance boost through higher frequency whenever possible. The System Agent sits on a third power plane which is low voltage (especially on mobile devices) in order to consume as little power as necessary.

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codenameSandy Bridge (client) +
core count2 + and 4 +
designerIntel +
first launchedSeptember 13, 2010 +
full page nameintel/microarchitectures/sandy bridge (client) +
instance ofmicroarchitecture +
instruction set architecturex86-64 +
manufacturerIntel +
microarchitecture typeCPU +
nameSandy Bridge (client) +
phase-outNovember 2012 +
pipeline stages (max)19 +
pipeline stages (min)14 +
process32 nm (0.032 μm, 3.2e-5 mm) +