Hello you fine Internet folks, I was at Intel Tech Tour this year where Intel talked about their upcoming Panther Lake and Clearwater Forest CPUs. I had a chance to sit down with Stephen Robinson, Lead Architect for x86 Cores at Intel, and talk about lntel’s approach to Cougar Cove and Darkmont and what changed from the prior generations.Hope y’all enjoy!The transcript has been edited for readability and conciseness.George Cozma: Hello you fine Internet folks! We’re here in Phoenix, Arizona at Intel Tech Tour 2025, where there’s been a number of disclosures about Panther Lake and Clearwater Forest. And joining me, to talk about the core architectures in both of those CPUs, is Stephen Robinson. What do you do at Intel?Stephen Robinson: I am a CPU architect and I lead the architecture team for the x86 cores.George Cozma: Awesome. So, diving straight in: so we did do an interview about- a recorded interview about Skymont. But going back to Skymont, what were the big changes from your previous architecture, Crestmont, moving into Skymont?Stephen Robinson: Yeah, so Skymont, we did a lot. We wanted to build a wider, deeper machine so that we could sort of run more workloads. So kind of, “coverage” is one of the terms we use sometimes. If we can get more workloads running on an E core, then we can bring more efficiency to the whole platform.So, you know, sometimes people want- “Why are you adding IPC to an E core? You’re making it more expensive, right?” Well, actually, software runs better. So we made the out-of-order depth about 50% bigger, somewhere around that ballpark. We went from two load ports to three. We roughly doubled the vector hardware. So we had two FMAs in Crestmont. Now we have four FMAs in Skymont. And then the front end, we went from kind of a six-wide, two cluster, three decode front end to a nine wide, three cluster. And then eight wide alloc and, you know, more branch prediction, a little bit more L2 bandwidth, the whole lot.George Cozma: So sort of a...
First seen: 2025-10-15 03:40
Last seen: 2025-10-15 14:42