data:post.title Micron Expands Datacenter DRAM Portfolio with MR-DIMMs <p align="center"><a href="https://www.anandtech.com/show/21470/micron-mrdimm-lineup-expands-datacenter-dram-portfolio"><img src="https://images.anandtech.com/doci/21470/micron-mrdimm-carousel_575px.jpg" alt="" /></a></p><p><p>The compute market has always been hungry for memory bandwidth, particularly for high-performance applications in servers and datacenters. In recent years, the explosion in core counts per socket has further accentuated this need. Despite progress in DDR speeds, the available bandwidth per core has unfortunately not seen a corresponding scaling.</p> <p align="center"><a href="https://www.anandtech.com/show/21470/micron-mrdimm-lineup-expands-datacenter-dram-portfolio"><img alt="" src="https://images.anandtech.com/doci/21470/micron-mrdimm-bw-scaling_575px.png" /></a></p> <p>The stakeholders in the industry have been attempting to address this by building additional technology on top of existing widely-adopted memory standards. With DDR5, there are currently two technologies attempting to increase the peak bandwidth beyond the official speeds. In late 2022, SK hynix <a href="https://www.anandtech.com/show/18683/sk-hynix-reveals-mcr-dimm-up-to-8gbps-bandwidth-for-hpc">introduced</a> MCR-DIMMs meant for operating with specific Intel server platforms. On the other hand, JEDEC - the standards-setting body - also developed specifications for MR-DIMMs with a similar approach. Both of them build upon existing DDR5 technologies by attempting to combine multiple ranks to improve peak bandwidth and latency.</p> <h3>How MR-DIMMs Work</h3> <p>The MR-DIMM standard is conceptually simple - there are multiple ranks of memory modules operating at standard DDR5 speeds with a data buffer in front. The buffer operates at 2x the speed on the host interface side, allowing for essentially double the transfer rates. The challenges obviously lie in being able to operate the logic in the host memory controller at the higher speed and keeping the power consumption / thermals in check.</p> <p align="center"><a href="https://www.anandtech.com/show/21470/micron-mrdimm-lineup-expands-datacenter-dram-portfolio"><img alt="" src="https://images.anandtech.com/doci/21470/micron-mrdimm-concept_575px.png" /></a></p> <p>The first version of the JEDEC MR-DIMM standard specifies speeds of 8800 MT/s, with the next generation at 12800 MT/s. JEDEC also has a clear roadmap for this technology, keeping it in sync with the the improvements in the DDR5 standard.</p> <h3>Micron MR-DIMMs - Bandwidth and Capacity Plays</h3> <p>Micron and Intel have been working closely in the last few quarters to bring their former&#39;s first-generation MR-DIMM lineup to the market. Intel&#39;s Xeon 6 Family with P-Cores (Granite Rapids) is the first platform to bring MR-DIMM support at 8800 MT/s on the host side. Micron&#39;s standard-sized MR-DIMMs (suitable for 1U servers) and TFF (tall form-factor) MR-DIMMs (for 2U+ servers) have been qualified for use with the same.</p> <p align="center"><a href="https://www.anandtech.com/show/21470/micron-mrdimm-lineup-expands-datacenter-dram-portfolio"><img alt="" src="https://images.anandtech.com/doci/21470/micron-mrdimm-lineup-intro_575px.png" /></a></p> <p>The benefits offered by MR-DIMMs are evident from the JEDEC specifications, allowing for increased data rates and system bandwidth, with improvements in latency. On the capacity side, allowing for additional ranks on the modules has enabled Micron to offer a 256 GB capacity point. It must be noted that some vendors are also using TSV (through-silicon vias) technology to to increase the per-package capacity at standard DDR5 speeds, but this adds additional cost and complexity that are largely absent in the MR-DIMM manufacturing process.</p> <p align="center"><a href="https://www.anandtech.com/show/21470/micron-mrdimm-lineup-expands-datacenter-dram-portfolio"><img alt="" src="https://images.anandtech.com/doci/21470/micron-mrdimm-tff-benefits_575px.png" /></a></p> <p>The tall form-factor (TFF) MR-DIMMs have a larger surface area compared to the standard-sized ones. For the same airflow configuration, this allows the DIMM to have a better thermal profile. This provides benefits for energy efficiency as well by reducing the possibility of thermal throttling.</p> <p align="center"><a href="https://www.anandtech.com/show/21470/micron-mrdimm-lineup-expands-datacenter-dram-portfolio"><img alt="" src="https://images.anandtech.com/doci/21470/micron-mrdimm-lineup-skus_575px.png" /></a></p> <p>Micron is launching a comprehensive lineup of MR-DIMMs in both standard and tall form-factors today, with multiple DRAM densities and speed options as noted above.</p> <h3>MRDIMM Benefits - Intel Granite Rapids Gets a Performance Boost</h3> <p>Micron and Intel hosted a media / analyst briefing recently to demonstrate the benefits of MR-DIMMs for Xeon 6 with P-Cores (Granite Rapids). Using a 2P configuration with 96-core Xeon 6 processors, benchmarks for different ... Memory

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Micron Expands Datacenter DRAM Portfolio with MR-DIMMs

The compute market has always been hungry for memory bandwidth, particularly for high-performance applications in servers and datacenters. In recent years, the explosion in core counts per socket has further accentuated this need. Despite progress in DDR speeds, the available bandwidth per core has unfortunately not seen a corresponding scaling.

The stakeholders in the industry have been attempting to address this by building additional technology on top of existing widely-adopted memory standards. With DDR5, there are currently two technologies attempting to increase the peak bandwidth beyond the official speeds. In late 2022, SK hynix introduced MCR-DIMMs meant for operating with specific Intel server platforms. On the other hand, JEDEC - the standards-setting body - also developed specifications for MR-DIMMs with a similar approach. Both of them build upon existing DDR5 technologies by attempting to combine multiple ranks to improve peak bandwidth and latency.

How MR-DIMMs Work

The MR-DIMM standard is conceptually simple - there are multiple ranks of memory modules operating at standard DDR5 speeds with a data buffer in front. The buffer operates at 2x the speed on the host interface side, allowing for essentially double the transfer rates. The challenges obviously lie in being able to operate the logic in the host memory controller at the higher speed and keeping the power consumption / thermals in check.

The first version of the JEDEC MR-DIMM standard specifies speeds of 8800 MT/s, with the next generation at 12800 MT/s. JEDEC also has a clear roadmap for this technology, keeping it in sync with the the improvements in the DDR5 standard.

Micron MR-DIMMs - Bandwidth and Capacity Plays

Micron and Intel have been working closely in the last few quarters to bring their former's first-generation MR-DIMM lineup to the market. Intel's Xeon 6 Family with P-Cores (Granite Rapids) is the first platform to bring MR-DIMM support at 8800 MT/s on the host side. Micron's standard-sized MR-DIMMs (suitable for 1U servers) and TFF (tall form-factor) MR-DIMMs (for 2U+ servers) have been qualified for use with the same.

The benefits offered by MR-DIMMs are evident from the JEDEC specifications, allowing for increased data rates and system bandwidth, with improvements in latency. On the capacity side, allowing for additional ranks on the modules has enabled Micron to offer a 256 GB capacity point. It must be noted that some vendors are also using TSV (through-silicon vias) technology to to increase the per-package capacity at standard DDR5 speeds, but this adds additional cost and complexity that are largely absent in the MR-DIMM manufacturing process.

The tall form-factor (TFF) MR-DIMMs have a larger surface area compared to the standard-sized ones. For the same airflow configuration, this allows the DIMM to have a better thermal profile. This provides benefits for energy efficiency as well by reducing the possibility of thermal throttling.

Micron is launching a comprehensive lineup of MR-DIMMs in both standard and tall form-factors today, with multiple DRAM densities and speed options as noted above.

MRDIMM Benefits - Intel Granite Rapids Gets a Performance Boost

Micron and Intel hosted a media / analyst briefing recently to demonstrate the benefits of MR-DIMMs for Xeon 6 with P-Cores (Granite Rapids). Using a 2P configuration with 96-core Xeon 6 processors, benchmarks for different ... Memory

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