Elbrus-8S
| General information | |
|---|---|
| Launched | end of 2014 prototypes, |
| Designed by | MCST |
| Performance | |
| Max. CPU clock rate | 1.3 GHz |
| Architecture and classification | |
| Instruction set | Elbrus 2000 |
| Physical specifications | |
| Cores |
|
| History | |
| Predecessor | Elbrus-4S |
| Successor | Elbrus-16S |
| General information | |
|---|---|
| Launched | end of 2017 prototypes, 2018 |
| Designed by | MCST |
| Performance | |
| Max. CPU clock rate | 1.5 GHz |
| Architecture and classification | |
| Instruction set | Elbrus 2000 |
| Physical specifications | |
| Cores |
|
| History | |
| Predecessor | Elbrus-4S |
| Successor | Elbrus-16S |
The Elbrus-8S (Russian: Эльбрус-8С) is a Russian 28 nanometer 8-core microprocessor developed by Moscow Center of SPARC Technologies (MCST). The first prototypes were produced by the end of 2014 and serial production started in 2016. The Elbrus-8S is to be used in servers and workstations. The processor's architecture allows support of up to 32 processors on a single server motherboard.
In 2018 MCST announced plans to produce the Elbrus-8SV, an upgraded version of the 8C with doubled performance. The CPU can process 576 Gflops and has a frequency of 1.5 GHz, as well as DDR4 support instead of DDR3. Engineering samples were already completed in Q3 2017. Development was completed in 2019 and its fabrication started in 2020.
In 2021 the processor was offered to Sberbank, Russia's largest bank, for evaluation in light of a potential use for some of the company's hardware needs. The evaluation had a negative outcome, as the functional requirements were not met.
A 2023 benchmark demonstrated that the Elbrus-8SV performed moderately in gaming with games that were 10 years old but was incompatible with many modern games tested.
A successor, Elbrus-16C, was announced in 2020 with declared start of manufacturing in October 2021, but it has not entered the market as of 2023.