Broadwell (microarchitecture)
| General information | |
|---|---|
| Launched | October 27, 2014 | 
| Discontinued | November 2018 | 
| Marketed by | Intel | 
| Designed by | Intel | 
| Common manufacturer | 
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| CPUID code | 0306D4h | 
| Product code | 
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| Performance | |
| QPI speeds | 6.4 GT/s to 9.6 GT/s | 
| DMI speeds | 4 GT/s | 
| Cache | |
| L1 cache | 64 KB per core | 
| L2 cache | 256 KB per core | 
| L3 cache | 2-6 MB (shared) | 
| L4 cache | 128 MB of eDRAM (Iris Pro models only) | 
| Architecture and classification | |
| Technology node | 14 nm (Tri-Gate) | 
| Microarchitecture | Haswell | 
| Instruction set | x86-16, IA-32, x86-64 | 
| Extensions | |
| Physical specifications | |
| Cores | 
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| GPUs | 
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| Sockets | 
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| Products, models, variants | |
| Product code name | 
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| Brand name | |
| History | |
| Predecessors | 
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| Successor | Skylake (tock/architecture) | 
| Support status | |
| Unsupported | |
Broadwell (previously Rockwell) is the fifth generation of the Intel Core processor. It is Intel's codename for the 14 nanometer die shrink of its Haswell microarchitecture. It is a "tick" in Intel's tick–tock principle as the next step in semiconductor fabrication. Like some of the previous tick-tock iterations, Broadwell did not completely replace the full range of CPUs from the previous microarchitecture (Haswell), as there were no low-end desktop CPUs based on Broadwell.
Some of the processors based on the Broadwell microarchitecture are marketed as "5th-generation Core" i3, i5 and i7 processors. This moniker is however not used for marketing of the Broadwell-based Celeron, Pentium or Xeon chips. This microarchitecture also introduced the Core M processor branding.
Broadwell's H and C variants are used in conjunction with Intel 9 Series chipsets (Z97, H97 and HM97), in addition to retaining backward compatibility with some of the Intel 8 Series chipsets.