The ARM Neoverse is a group of 64-bit ARM processor cores licensed by Arm Holdings. The cores are intended for datacenter, edge computing, and high-performance computing use. The group consists of ARM Neoverse V-Series, ARM Neoverse N-Series, and ARM Neoverse E-Series.
The Neoverse V-Series processors are intended for high-performance computing.
Neoverse V1 (code named Zeus) is derived from the Cortex-X1 and implements the ARMv8.4-A instruction set and some part of ARMv8.6-A. It was officially announced by Arm on September 22, 2020. It is said to be initially realized with a 7 nm process from TSMC. One of the changes from the X1 is that it supports SVE 2x256-bit.
According to The Next Platform, the AWS Graviton3 is based on the Neoverse V1.
Neoverse V2 (code named Demeter) is derived from the ARM Cortex-X3 and implements the ARMv9.0-A instruction set. It was officially announced by Arm on September 14, 2022. NVIDIA Grace, AWS Graviton4 and Google Axion are based on the Neoverse V2.
Notable changes from the Neoverse V1:
Neoverse V3, (code named Poseidon) was teased by Arm alongside the V2 and E2 announcements. It is targeted for systems including DDR5, PCIe gen6, and CXL 3.0. The codename Poseidon was first used for the generation succeeding Zeus, now V1, and targeted for 2021 on a 5nm node.
The Neoverse N-Series processors are intended for core datacenter usage.
On February 20, 2019, Arm announced the Neoverse N1 microarchitecture (code named Ares) derived from the Cortex-A76 redesigned for infrastructure/server applications. The reference design supports up to 64 or 128 Neoverse N1 cores.
Notable changes from the Cortex-A76:
Neoverse N1 implements the ARMv8.2-A instruction set.
The Ampere Altra (2-socket 80-core) and AWS Graviton2 (64-core) CPU platforms are based on Neoverse N1 cores and were released in 2020.
The Neoverse N2 (code named Perseus) is derived from the Cortex-A710 and implements the ARMv9.0-A instruction set. It was officially announced by Arm on September 22, 2020. On August 28, 2023, Arm announced the Neoverse CSS N2 (Genesis), a customizable CPU subsystem implementation by Arm to reduce the time to market for customers. Microsoft Azure Cobalt 100 128 Core CPU uses Neoverse N2.
Notable changes from the Neoverse N1:
Neoverse N-Next, presumably N3, was teased by Arm alongside the V2 and E2 announcements. It is targeted for systems including DDR5, PCIe gen6, and CXL 3.0.
The Neoverse E-Series processors are intended for edge computing. They are designed for increased data throughput at decreased power consumption.
Neoverse E1 is derived from the Cortex-A65AE and implements the ARMv8.2-A instruction set. It support SMT.
Neoverse E2 is derived from the Cortex-A510 and implements the ARMv9-A instruction set.
Neoverse E-Next, presumably E3, was teased by Arm alongside the V2 and E2 announcements. It is targeted for systems including DDR5, PCIe gen6, and CXL 3.0.
INT8 | BF16 | FP32 | FP64 | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Neoverse N1 | 64 | 32 | 16 | 8 |
Neoverse N2 | 128 | 64 | 16 | 8 |
Neoverse V1 | 256 | 128 | 32 | 16 |
Intel 3rd Gen Xeon SP | 256 | — | 64 | 32 |
Intel 4th Gen Xeon SP | 2048 | 1024 | 64 | 32 |
With code name Poseidon a successor for Neoverse V1 (aka Zeus) was first publicly mentioned on TechCon 2018. Actual introduction (used by third party chip designers in their products) was given in form of a rough target date of 2021. Its initial realization process is said to be 5 nm by TSMC.