Ryzen Embedded 5000 processors secures ‘always on’ NAS systems
Developed for use in ‘always on’ networking firewalls, network attached storage systems and other security applications, AMD’s Ryzen Embedded 5000 series processors is the latest member of the Zen 3-based AMD embedded processor portfolio, joining the Ryzen Embedded V3000 and EPYC Embedded 7000 series families.
The processors are equipped with six, eight, 12 or 16 cores and 24 lanes of PCIe Gen4 connectivity.
The Ryzen Embedded 5000 series processors offer scalability up to 16 cores and 32 threads and up to 64Mbyte of shared L3 CPU cache.
The processors are designed for enterprise reliability to support the consistent uptime requirements needed by security and networking customers, explained AMD. Features include an ECC-supported memory subsystem. The thermal design power (TDP) profile ranges from 65W to 105W, enabling the Ryzen Embedded 5000 processors to reduce the overall system cooling footprint for space-constrained and cost-sensitive applications.
According to Rajneesh Gaur, corporate vice president and general manager, embedded solutions group, AMD: “This expansion of our embedded product portfolio offers a mid-range solution that fills the gap between our low-power BGA Ryzen Embedded and . . . EPYC embedded family for customers requiring both high performance and scalability of up to 16 cores.”
The series consists of the 5950E with 16 cores, the 5900E (12 cores), 5800W (eight cores) and 5600E (six cores) all with 24 PCIe Gen 43 lanes and 3.05 to 3.4GHz CPU base frequency, depending on the model.
The Ryzen Embedded 5000 processors are built on 7nm technology and are currently in production, with planned five-year manufacturing availability.
For more than 50 years, AMD has innovated in high performance computing, graphics and visualisation technologies, says the company.