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Jaguar (microarchitecture)

Jaguar - Family 16h
Produced From Mid-2013 to present
Common manufacturer(s)
Min. feature size 28 nm
Instruction set AMD64 (x86-64)
L1 cache 64 KB per core
L2 cache 1 MB to 2 MB shared
Socket(s)
Predecessor Bobcat - Family 14h
Successor Puma - Family 16h (2nd-gen)
Core name(s)
  • Kabini
  • Temash
  • Kyoto
  • G-series
  • Athlon, Sempron, A4, A6, & E4

The AMD Jaguar Family 16h is a low-power microarchitecture designed by AMD, and used in APUs succeeding the Bobcat Family microarchitecture in 2013 and being succeeded by AMD's Puma architecture in 2014. It is two-way superscalar and capable of out of order execution. It is used in AMD's Semi-Custom Business Unit as a design for custom processors and is used by AMD in four product families: Kabini aimed at notebooks and mini PCs, Temash aimed at tablets, Kyoto aimed at micro-servers, and the G-Series aimed at embedded applications. Both the PlayStation 4 and the Xbox One use chips based on the Jaguar microarchitecture, with more powerful GPUs than AMD sells in its own commercially available Jaguar APUs.

The Jaguar core has support for the following instruction sets and instructions: MMX, SSE, SSE2, SSE3, SSSE3, SSE4a, SSE4.1, SSE4.2, AVX, F16C, CLMUL, AES, BMI1, MOVBE (Move Big-Endian instruction), XSAVE/XSAVEOPT, ABM (POPCNT/LZCNT), and AMD-V.

Xbox One S and PlayStation 4 Pro specs are for announced but unreleased or unconfirmed hardware specs as currently reported, December 31, 2016.

SoCs using Socket AM1:


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Wikipedia

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