• Welcome to TechPowerUp Forums, Guest! Please check out our forum guidelines for info related to our community.
  • The forums have been upgraded with support for dark mode. By default it will follow the setting on your system/browser. You may override it by scrolling to the end of the page and clicking the gears icon.

Intel "Granite Rapids-D" Xeon Processors Come in Core-count and Memory-channel Based Physical Variants

btarunr

Editor & Senior Moderator
Staff member
Joined
Oct 9, 2007
Messages
47,771 (7.41/day)
Location
Dublin, Ireland
System Name RBMK-1000
Processor AMD Ryzen 7 5700G
Motherboard Gigabyte B550 AORUS Elite V2
Cooling DeepCool Gammax L240 V2
Memory 2x 16GB DDR4-3200
Video Card(s) Galax RTX 4070 Ti EX
Storage Samsung 990 1TB
Display(s) BenQ 1440p 60 Hz 27-inch
Case Corsair Carbide 100R
Audio Device(s) ASUS SupremeFX S1220A
Power Supply Cooler Master MWE Gold 650W
Mouse ASUS ROG Strix Impact
Keyboard Gamdias Hermes E2
Software Windows 11 Pro
The "Granite Rapids-D" line of upcoming processors are designed for data-center servers on the edge. These non-socketed processors come in BGA4368 packages. The company is reportedly readying at least two key variants of these chips based on core-counts and memory channels. The "Granite Rapids-D" HCC (high core-count) is an MCM of a "Granite Rapids" LCC (low-core count) compute tile, and a single I/O tile with a 4-channel DDR5 memory interface.

The "Granite Rapids-D" XCC (extreme core-count) has one "Granite Rapids" HCC (high core-count) compute tile, and two I/O tiles that make up the chip's 8-channel DDR5 memory interface. A probable reason for the confusion between LCC, HCC, and XCC terminologies for "Granite Rapids-D" is because the compute tiles are carried over from the main "Granite Rapids-SP" server processors, where they mean different things for the core-counts of mainline servers.



View at TechPowerUp Main Site | Source
 
They really are trying to make it as confusing as possible, aren't they?
 
They really are trying to make it as confusing as possible, aren't they?
At least these appear to be in the server space, where hopefully the corporate committee making the order will have some clue, or at least it's not their money if they got it wrong.
 
At least these appear to be in the server space, where hopefully the corporate committee making the order will have some clue, or at least it's not their money if they got it wrong.
The people actually tasked with ordering these still have to understand what they're getting. This is making it unnecessarily hard, especially with how they are defining the terminology.
 
Back
Top