Jaguar (microarchitecture)
| General information | |
|---|---|
| Launched | Mid-2013 |
| Discontinued | present |
| Common manufacturer | |
| Cache | |
| L1 cache | 64 KB per core |
| L2 cache | 1 MB to 2 MB shared |
| Architecture and classification | |
| Technology node | 28 nm |
| Instruction set | AMD64 (x86-64-v2) |
| Physical specifications | |
| Sockets |
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| Products, models, variants | |
| Core names |
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| History | |
| Predecessor | Bobcat - Family 14h |
| Successors | Puma - Family 16h (2nd-gen) CPU of Xbox One X |
The AMD Jaguar Family 16h is a low-power microarchitecture designed by AMD. It is 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 SoCs based on the Jaguar microarchitecture, with more powerful GPUs than AMD sells in its own commercially available Jaguar APUs.