Penryn (microarchitecture)

Penryn
General information
LaunchedNovember 2007; 17 years ago (November 2007)
Performance
Max. CPU clock rate1.06 GHz to 3.33 GHz
FSB speeds533 MT/s to 1600 MT/s
Cache
L1 cache64 KB per core
L2 cache1 MB to 12 MB unified
L3 cache8 MB to 16 MB shared (Xeon)
Architecture and classification
MicroarchitectureCore
Instruction setx86-16, IA-32, x86-64
Extensions
Physical specifications
Transistors
Cores
  • 1-4 (2-6 Xeon)
Sockets
Products, models, variants
Model
  • P6 Family (Celeron, Pentium, Pentium Dual-Core, Core 2 range, Xeon)
History
PredecessorCore
SuccessorNehalem
Support status
Unsupported

In Intel's Tick-Tock cycle, the 2007/2008 "Tick" was the shrink of the Core microarchitecture to 45 nanometers as CPUID model 23. In Core 2 processors, it is used with the code names Penryn (Socket P), Wolfdale (LGA 775) and Yorkfield (MCM, LGA 775), some of which are also sold as Celeron, Pentium and Xeon processors. In the Xeon brand, the Wolfdale-DP and Harpertown code names are used for LGA 771 based MCMs with two or four active Wolfdale cores.

Architectural improvements over 65-nanometer Core 2 CPUs include a new divider with reduced latency, a new shuffle engine, and SSE4.1 instructions (some of which are enabled by the new single-cycle shuffle engine).[1]

Maximum L2 cache size per chip was increased from 4 to 6 MB, with L2 associativity increased from 16-way to 24-way. Cut-down versions with 3 MB L2 also exist, which are commonly called Penryn-3M and Wolfdale-3M as well as Yorkfield-6M, respectively. The single-core version of Penryn, listed as Penryn-L here, is not a separate model like Merom-L but a version of the Penryn-3M model with only one active core.

  1. ^ "Intel Core 2 Extreme QX9650 - Penryn Ticks Ahead".