Intel just announced its Xeon 6+ Clearwater Forest server CPU range, with up to 288 E-Cores

Intel's new monster CPU combines the force of hundreds of efficient cores in a high-tech, super-fast package.

Intel has just showcased its Xeon 6+ processors at the Mobile World Congress in Barcelona, with huge counts of up to 288 E-Cores. Codenamed Clearwater Forest, and targeted at network and cloud infrastructures, the new CPUs feature a multi-chiplet design combining 12 compute tiles, resulting in a highly dense core arrangement.

The company is positioning Xeon 6+ in its AI-ready networking portfolio, targeting on-site AI inference/edge deployments as networks transition toward 6G. To prime it for the demands of upcoming communication standards, Intel has used its high-bandwidth, on-chip fabric 2.5D EMIB links, and Foveros Direct 3D die stacking technologies, to combine multiple compute tiles in one package.

Intel Xeon 6+ Clearwater Forest features.

Together, these technologies enable Intel to combine 12 compute tiles made using its 18A node, with three active base tiles made using its 7nm-class (Intel 3) process and two I/O tiles manufactured on its advanced 10nm-class (Intel 7) fabrication process. Each compute tile can be further broken into six modules containing four Darkmont E-cores, resulting in 24 cores per compute tile, 288 cores per CPU, or 576 cores on dual-socket platforms.

Each one of these cores gets access to 64KB instruction cache, a wider front end than before, and a larger 416-entry out-of-order window for improved parallelism. Quad-core groups share 4MB of L2 cache, complemented by 576MB of last-level cache across the CPU. Execution resources have also been increased to improve parallel integer and vector throughput.

Intel Xeon 6+ Clearwater Forest PCIe and memory specs.

Moving to the I/O tiles, we have two chiplets, each packing eight accelerators, 48 PCIe Gen 5 lanes, 32 CXL 2.0 lanes, and 96 UPI 2.0 lanes – the brand’s point-to-point interconnect for linking up Xeon CPUs. In other words, a Clearwater Forest CPU offers 16 accelerators, including four Intel QuickAssist Technology, four Intel Dynamic Load Balancers, four Intel Data Streaming Accelerators, and four Intel In-Memory Analytics Accelerators, alongside 96 PCIe Gen 5 lanes, 64 CXL 2.0 lanes, and 192 UPI lanes. For memory, Intel advertises support for 12 memory channels and up to DDR5-8000 modules. Accelerators aside, these I/O tiles seem identical to those used in Intel’s Granite Ridge chips.

Intel Xeon 6+ vs Xeon 6700E.

Compared to last-gen Xeon 6700E CPUs, the new Xeon 6+ processors provide double the core count, with Intel claiming a 17% increase in instructions per clock (IPC) per core, 5x more last-level cache, and a 20% faster memory speed, with dual socket implementations allowing up to 3TB of DDR5 memory. Regarding power consumption, Intel lists a TDP range of 300-500W for Xeon6+.

Intel plans to release its Xeon 6+ processors in the first-half of 2026, offering network and data centre operators a platform capable of handling hundreds of VMs per socket.

Fahd Temsamani
Fahd Temsamani
Senior Writer at Club386, his love for computers began with an IBM running MS-DOS, and he’s been pushing the limits of technology ever since. Known for his overclocking prowess, Fahd once unlocked an extra 1.1GHz from a humble Pentium E5300 - a feat that cemented his reputation as a master tinkerer. Fluent in English, Arabic, and French, his motto when building a new rig is ‘il ne faut rien laisser au hasard.’

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