Top Qs
Timeline
Chat
Perspective
AMD Phenom
Series of CPUs by AMD From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Remove ads
Phenom (/fɪˈnɒm/) is the 64-bit AMD desktop processor line based on the K10 microarchitecture,[1] in what AMD calls family 10h (10 hex, i.e. 16 in normal decimal numbers) processors, sometimes incorrectly called "K10h". Triple-core versions (codenamed Toliman) belong to the Phenom 8000 series and quad cores (codenamed Agena) to the AMD Phenom X4 9000 series. The first processor in the family was released in 2007.
Remove ads
Background
Summarize
Perspective
AMD considers the quad core Phenoms to be the first "true" quad core design, as these processors are a monolithic multi-core design (all cores on the same silicon die), unlike Intel's Core 2 Quad series which are a multi-chip module (MCM) design. The processors are on the Socket AM2+ platform.[2]
Before Phenom's original release a flaw was discovered in the translation lookaside buffer (TLB) that could cause a system lock-up in rare circumstances; Phenom processors up to and including stepping "B2" and "BA" are affected by this bug. BIOS and software workarounds disable the TLB, and typically incur a performance penalty of at least 10%.[3] This penalty was not accounted for in pre-release previews of Phenom, hence the performance of early Phenoms delivered to customers may have been less than the preview benchmarks. "B3" stepping Phenom processors were released March 27, 2008 without the TLB bug and with "xx50" model numbers.[4]
An AMD subsidiary released a patch for the Linux kernel,[5] to overcome this bug by software emulation of accessed- and dirty-bits. This method causes less performance loss than previous workarounds. The program was said in December 2007 to have received "minimal functional testing."[6][7]
AMD launched several models of the Phenom processor in 2007 and 2008 and an upgraded Phenom II in late 2008.[8][9][10][11]
Remove ads
Features
![]() | This section is empty. You can help by adding to it. (March 2023) |
Model naming methodology
The model numbers of the Phenom line of processors were changed from the PR system used in its predecessors, the AMD Athlon 64 processor family. The Phenom model numbering scheme, for-later released Athlon X2 processors, is a four-digit model number whose first digit is a family indicator.[12] Energy Efficient products end with an “e” suffix (for example, "Phenom 9350e"). Some Sempron processors use the prefix LE (for example, "Sempron LE-1200")
Cores
Phenom X4
Agena (65 nm SOI)

- Four AMD K10 cores
- L1 cache: 64 KB + 64 KB[14] (data + instructions) per core
- L2 cache: 512 KB per core, full-speed
- L3 cache: 2 MB shared among all cores
- Memory controller: dual channel DDR2-1066 MHz with unganging option
- MMX, Extended 3DNow!, SSE, SSE2, SSE3, SSE4a, AMD64, Cool'n'Quiet, NX bit, AMD-V
- Socket AM2+, HyperTransport with 1600 to 2000 MHz
- Power consumption (TDP): 65, 95, 125 and 140 Watt
- First release
- November 19, 2007 (B2 Stepping)
- March 27, 2008 (B3 Stepping)
- Clock rate: 1800 to 2600 MHz
- Models: Phenom X4 9100e to 9950
Phenom X3
Toliman (65 nm SOI)

- Three AMD K10 cores chip harvested from Agena with one core disabled[15]
- L1 cache: 64 KB data and 64 KB instruction cache per core
- L2 cache: 512 KB per core, full-speed
- L3 cache: 2 MB shared between all cores
- Memory controller: dual channel DDR2-1066 MHz with unganging option
- MMX, Extended 3DNow!, SSE, SSE2, SSE3, SSE4a, AMD64, Cool'n'Quiet, NX bit, AMD-V
- Socket AM2+, HyperTransport with 1600 to 1800 MHz
- Power consumption (TDP): 65 and 95 Watt
- First release
- March 27, 2008 (B2 Stepping)
- April 23, 2008 (B3 Stepping)
- Clock rate: 2100 to 2500 MHz
- Models: Phenom X3 8250e to 8850
Remove ads
See also
References
External links
Wikiwand - on
Seamless Wikipedia browsing. On steroids.
Remove ads