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===== Allocation Queue =====
 
===== Allocation Queue =====
The emitted µOPs from the decoders are sent directly to the Allocation Queue (AQ) or Instruction Decode Queue (IDQ). The Allocation Queue acts as the interface between the front-end ([[in-order]]) and the back-end ([[out-of-order]]). Skylake's Allocation Queue has more than doubled from {{\\|Broadwell}} from 28-entries per thread to 64-entries per thread. Unlike in {{\\|Haswell}}, the IDQ is no longer competitively shared; it's partitioned between two active threads. The queue's purpose is effectively help absorb [[bubbles]] which may be introduced in the front-end, ensuring that a steady stream of 6 µOPs are delivered each cycle.
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The emitted µOPs from the decoders are sent directly to the Allocation Queue (AQ) or Instruction Decode Queue (IDQ). The Allocation Queue acts as the interface between the front-end ([[in-order]]) and the back-end ([[out-of-order]]). Skylake's Allocation Queue has more than doubled from {{\\|Broadwell}} from 28-entries per thread to 64-entries per thread. Unlike in {{\\|Haswell}}, the IDQ is no longer competitively shared; it's partitioned between two active core. The queue's purpose is effectively help absorb [[bubbles]] which may be introduced in the front-end, ensuring that a steady stream of 6 µOPs are delivered each cycle.
  
 
====== µOP-Fusion & LSD ======
 
====== µOP-Fusion & LSD ======

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codenameSkylake (client) +
core count2 + and 4 +
designerIntel +
first launchedAugust 5, 2015 +
full page nameintel/microarchitectures/skylake (client) +
instance ofmicroarchitecture +
instruction set architecturex86-64 +
manufacturerIntel +
microarchitecture typeCPU +
nameSkylake (client) +
pipeline stages (max)19 +
pipeline stages (min)14 +
process14 nm (0.014 μm, 1.4e-5 mm) +