Oryon is an 8 to 12-core CPU implementing the ARMv8.7-A architecture. It is used on the Snapdragon X Plus and Snapdragon X Elite systems on chips, first released in June 2024.[1]
It began development in 2021 when Nuvia[2] was acquired by Qualcomm.
It is the first custom microarchitecture released by Qualcomm since Kryo.
Variants
editProcessor | Core count | Total cache | Max multithread frequency | Boost frequency | Memory type |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
X1E-00-1DE | 12 | 42 MB | 3.8 GHz | 4.3 GHz (dual-core) | LPDDR5x-8448 |
X1E-84-100 | 12 | 42 MB | 3.8 GHz | 4.2 GHz (dual-core) | LPDDR5x-8448 |
X1E-80-100 | 12 | 42 MB | 3.4 GHz | 4.0 GHz (dual-core) | LPDDR5x-8448 |
X1E-78-100 | 12 | 42 MB | 3.4 GHz | – | LPDDR5x-8448 |
X1P-66-100 | 10 | 42 MB | 3.4 GHz | 4.0 GHz (single-core) | LPDDR5x-8448 |
X1P-64-100 | 10 | 42 MB | 3.4 GHz | – | LPDDR5x-8448 |
X1E-46-100 | 8 | 30 MB | 3.4 GHz | 4.0 GHz (single-core) | LPDDR5x-8448 |
X1P-42-100 | 8 | 30 MB | 3.2 GHz | 3.4 GHz (single-core) | LPDDR5x-8448 |
References
edit- ^ "The Qualcomm Snapdragon X Architecture Deep Dive: Getting To Know Oryon and Adreno X1". Anandtech. 2024-06-21. Retrieved 29 June 2024.
{{cite web}}
: CS1 maint: url-status (link) - ^ Statt, Nick (13 January 2021). "Qualcomm just bought a two-year-old startup founded by former Apple engineers for $1.4 billion". The Verge. Retrieved 9 August 2024.
Nuvia, was formed in 2019 by three former engineers and chip specialists, all of whom worked at Apple on the A-series chip line that powers the iPhone and iPad
- ^ "Snapdragon X Elite". Qualcomm. Retrieved 29 June 2024.
{{cite web}}
: CS1 maint: url-status (link)