Family 15h: Difference between revisions
Jump to navigation
Jump to search
No edit summary |
add infobox but this should be templated |
||
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
{{Infobox | |||
|title = Family 15h | |||
|label1 = Introduced | |||
|data1 = October 12, 2011 | |||
}} | |||
'''Family 15h''' (also known as '''fam15h''', or ambiguously as '''fam15''') is a family of AMD microprocessors corresponding to the [[Bulldozer]], [[Piledriver]], [[Steamroller]], and [[Excavator]] microarchitectures. | '''Family 15h''' (also known as '''fam15h''', or ambiguously as '''fam15''') is a family of AMD microprocessors corresponding to the [[Bulldozer]], [[Piledriver]], [[Steamroller]], and [[Excavator]] microarchitectures. | ||
Like other AMD family names, 15h ("15 hexadecimal") is a mostly-arbitrary, somewhat-sequential (new processor families receive unused higher family numbers) number, returned by the x86 <code>CPUID</code> instruction as a "Family number", and commonly written in hexadecimal. 15 in hexadecimal corresponds to the number 21 in decimal, meaning that while "Family 21" would also be a valid, if confusing, name for these CPUs, "Family 15" might in fact refer to fam0Fh (K8 CPUs, first released in 2003). | Like other AMD family names, 15h ("15 hexadecimal") is a mostly-arbitrary, somewhat-sequential (new processor families receive unused higher family numbers) number, returned by the x86 <code>CPUID</code> instruction as a "Family number", and commonly written in hexadecimal. 15 in hexadecimal corresponds to the number 21 in decimal, meaning that while "Family 21" would also be a valid, if confusing, name for these CPUs, "Family 15" might in fact refer to fam0Fh (K8 CPUs, first released in 2003). |
Revision as of 08:05, 26 August 2024
Introduced | October 12, 2011 |
---|
Family 15h (also known as fam15h, or ambiguously as fam15) is a family of AMD microprocessors corresponding to the Bulldozer, Piledriver, Steamroller, and Excavator microarchitectures.
Like other AMD family names, 15h ("15 hexadecimal") is a mostly-arbitrary, somewhat-sequential (new processor families receive unused higher family numbers) number, returned by the x86 CPUID
instruction as a "Family number", and commonly written in hexadecimal. 15 in hexadecimal corresponds to the number 21 in decimal, meaning that while "Family 21" would also be a valid, if confusing, name for these CPUs, "Family 15" might in fact refer to fam0Fh (K8 CPUs, first released in 2003).