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AMD Opteron

 4200 Series Processor 

KEY FEATURES

>

>

New>Core>Architecture

 — drives more core density and 

greater throughput 

>

>

AMD>Turbo>CORE>Technology

 — allows processors 

to independently boost their clock speeds, scaling 
frequency up 300MHz-1.2GHz automatically to respond  
to the need for more application performance

2

>

>

C6>Power>State

 — reduces processor power  

consumption at active idle by up to 39%

3

>

>

AMD>Virtualization

>(AMD-V

)>Technology>2.0

 —  

heightens virtualization efficiency with new 
enhancements to the AMD-V

 suite of virtualization 

to optimize data center rack space and help minimize 
management tasks

END USER BENEFITS

Designed for enterprise workloads while still delivering a 
performance punch 

 

> A 33% increase in core count packs in plenty of processing 

performance into a smaller, more efficient, 8-core design while 
maintaining very aggressive power/thermal ranges

4,5

 

> Power per core that shatters the 5W/core mark, a new record 

for an enterprise-class x86 processor

1

 

 

> New power management capabilities allow for larger parts of 

the processor to be almost completely powered off when not 
being used, dramatically reducing idle core power consumption 
by up to 39% over the previous generation of processors and 
allowing active cores to run at a higher frequency

3

 

> AMD Turbo CORE technology takes advantage of additional 

power headroom to digitally boost all cores simultaneously 
by up to 300MHz and can boost up to 1.2GHz when only half 
of the cores are active

2

, allowing applications to finish tasks 

quickly and return to lower power states 

 

> Straight-through computing helps ensure that there are not 

bottlenecks or compromises as up to eight threads get their 
own dedicated core when workload demands increase with 
maximum memory channel and I/O speed (across all SKUs/
price points) helping to ensure that there are no bottlenecks or 
feature compromises unlike Intel, who purposely throttles down 
capabilities 

Delivering new levels of enterprise scalability for demanding 
cloud applications and SMB/Infrastructure applications

 

> Scale your cloud workload with up to 8 cores in a low power 

processor 

 

> Efficiently scales performance/watt based on the innovative 

modular design and aggressive power capabilities 

 

> New power saving features, like TDP Power Cap, put the 

customer in control of more aspects of power efficiency than 
ever before on AMD Opteron

 processor-based servers 

 

> Up to 8 cores and more processing throughput

6

 than the 

previous generation helps your cloud easily scale within 
the most fluid and spiky processing environments, easily 
responding to the elastic needs of clouds 

Bringing unparalleled efficiency to your processing, power and 
financial budgets

 

> The lowest enterprise-class power per core with up to 8 cores 

in only 35W of power, shattering the previous record

1

 

> 32nm design and a smaller die

4

 drive more efficiency at 

the processor level to help ensure you are maximizing your 
performance per watt per square foot

 

> Virtualized infrastructure deployments can enjoy 33% more 

VMs in the same power and thermal ranges

5

 thanks to the 

new AMD-V

 virtualization features, allowing small/medium 

businesses to grow with their business needs on a single 
virtualized platform

 

> New instructions make processing technical software 

commands more efficient, allowing for more computing per 
cycle, which helps drive down processing requirements so that 
web/cloud applications can more easily process their workload 
and return to lower power states

 

> Easy on your budget through both unprecedented value 

and low power consumption, helping hold down not only 
acquisition costs but also the long-term total cost of ownership

AMD Opteron

 4200 Series Processor Quick Reference Guide

The world’s lowest power x86 cloud processor

1

 just got more efficient

1  As of March 16, 2012 AMD Opteron

 processor Models 4200 EE have the lowest known power per core of any x86 server processor, at 35W 

TDP (35W/8 = 4.375W/core). Intel’s lowest power per core server processor, Intel Xeon E5-2650L, is 70W TDP (70W/8 = 8.75W/core). See www.

intc.com/pricelist.cfm as of 3/16/12. Previous record held by AMD Opteron processor Models 4100 EE at 35W TDP / 6 cores = 5.83 W/core. 

SVR-58

2 AMD Opteron 4200 Series processors experience all core boost of up to 300 MHz (P2 base to P1 boost state) and up to 1.2 GHz max turbo boost 

(half or fewer cores boost from P2 to P0 boost state). SVR-63

3 Based on testing in AMD Performance Labs as of March 2012, an AMD Opteron

 processor model 4174 (6-core 2.3GHz) consumes 6.47W in the 

active idle C1E power state while an AMD Opteron

 processor model 4284 (8-core 3.0GHz) consumes only 3.977W in the active idle C1E power 

state with new C6 power gating employed. System configuration: “Kruger-P” reference design kit, 32GB (4x 8GB DDR3-1066) memory, Seagate 

ST3500413AS SATA disk drive, Microsoft

®

 Windows Server 2008 x64 Enterprise Edition R2 SP1. SVR-62

4 Based on AMD Opteron 4100 Series processor at 346 mm2 vs. AMD Opteron 4200 Series processor at 316mm2. SVR-46

5 Based on 8-core AMD Opteron 4200 Series processors at 35W, 65W and 95W TDP compared to 6-core AMD Opteron 4100 Series processors 

at 35W, 65W and 95W TDP when utilizing the 1 VM per core loading rule. SVR-59

6 SPEC and SPECint are registered trademarks of the Standard Performance Evaluation Corporation. The results reflect results published onhttp://

www.spec.org/cpu2006/results/ as of 4/12/12. The comparison presented above is based on the best performing two-socket servers using AMD 

Opteron

 processor Models 4184 and 4284. For the latest SPECint

®

_rate2006 results, visit http://www.spec.org/cpu2006/results/.  285 using 2 

x AMD Opteron

 processors Model 4284 in Dell PowerEdge R515 server, 32 GB (4 x 8 GB 2Rx4 PC3-12800R-11, ECC), Red Hat Enterprise Linux

®

 

Server release 6.1, Kernel 2.6.32-131.0.15.el6.x86_64, C/C++: Version 4.2.5.2 of x86 Open64 Compiler Suite (from AMD), http://www.spec.org/

cpu2006/results/res2011q4/cpu2006-20111206-19137.html; 237 using 2 x AMD Opteron

 processors Model 4184 in Dell PowerEdge R415 server, 

32GB (8 x 4GB DDR3-1333) memory, SuSE Linux

®

 Enterprise Server 11, x86 Open64 4.2.4 Compiler Suite, http://www.spec.org/cpu2006/results/

res2010q4/cpu2006-20100927-13463.html. SVR-120

AMD Confidential — NDA Required Until Launch June 2012

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