Elbrus: Difference between revisions
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== See also == | == See also == | ||
* [[Elbrus/faq]] | |||
* [http://www.tomshardware.com/news/russian-company-tapes-out-16-core-elbrus-cpu-20-ghz-16-tb-of-ram-in-4-way-system Russian Company Tapes Out 16-Core Elbrus CPU: 2.0 GHz, 16 TB of RAM in 4-Way System] | |||
* [http://www.anandtech.com/show/15823/russias-elbrus-8cb-microarchitecture-8core-vliw-on-tsmc-28nm Russia’s Elbrus 8CB Microarchitecture: 8-core VLIW on TSMC 28nm] | * [http://www.anandtech.com/show/15823/russias-elbrus-8cb-microarchitecture-8core-vliw-on-tsmc-28nm Russia’s Elbrus 8CB Microarchitecture: 8-core VLIW on TSMC 28nm] | ||
** [http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7LQgLl_89Po A Russian 🇷🇺 CPU: The 8-core МЦСТ Эльбрус-8С! (MCST Elbrus)] | ** [http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7LQgLl_89Po A Russian 🇷🇺 CPU: The 8-core МЦСТ Эльбрус-8С! (MCST Elbrus)] |
Revision as of 16:21, 13 October 2020
ALT on Elbrus
ALT distribution is being ported onto Elbrus (e2k) architecture since 2015 and is self-hosted since 2017; our main releases are available to Elbrus system owners since 9.0 version (and server/workstation ones were ported for 8.2 release).
See also
- Elbrus/faq
- Russian Company Tapes Out 16-Core Elbrus CPU: 2.0 GHz, 16 TB of RAM in 4-Way System
- Russia’s Elbrus 8CB Microarchitecture: 8-core VLIW on TSMC 28nm
- Free software porting onto the Elbrus architecture
- Russian Microprocessors of the Elbrus Architecture Series for Servers and Supercomputers (PDF)
- elbrus2k.wikidot.com
- ru:ports/e2k
- ru:elbrus