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Micron's CZ120 CXL Memory Expansion Modules Unveiled: 128GB and 256GB

Micron's CZ120 CXL Memory Expansion Modules Unveiled: 128GB and 256GB

This week, Micron announced the sample availability of its first CXL 2.0 memory expansion modules for servers that promise easy and cheap DRAM subsystem expansions. 


Modern server platforms from AMD and Intel boast formidable 12- and 8-channel DDR5 memory subsystems offering bandwidth of up to 460.8 – 370.2 GB/s and capacities of up to 6 – 4 TB per socket. But some applications consume all DRAM they can get and demand more. To satisfy the needs of such applications, Micron has developed its CZ120 CXL 2.0 memory expansion modules that carry 128 GB and 256 GB of DRAM and connect to a CPU using a PCIe 5.0 x8 interface.


Micron is advancing the adoption of CXL memory with this CZ120 sampling milestone to key customers,” said Siva Makineni, vice president of the Micron Advanced Memory Systems Group.


Micron’s CZ120 memory expansion modules use Microchip’s SMC 2000-series smart memory controller that supports two 64-bit DDR4/DDR5 channels as well as Micron’s DRAM chips made on the company’s 1α (1-alpha) memory production node. Every CZ120 module delivers bandwidth up to 36 GB/s (measured by running an MLC workload with a 2:1 read/write ratio on a single module), putting it only slightly behind a DDR5-4800 RDIMM (38.4 GB/s) but orders of magnitude ahead of a NAND-based storage device.



Micron asserts that adding four of its 256 GB CZ120 CXL 2.0 Type 3 expansion modules to a server running 12 64GB DDR5 RDIMMs can increase memory bandwidth by 24%, which is significant. Perhaps more significant is that adding an extra 1 TB of memory enables such a server to handle nearly double the number of database queries daily.


Of course, such an expansion means using PCIe lanes and thus reducing the number of SSDs that can be installed into such a machine. But the reward seems quite noticeable, especially if Micron’s CZ120 memory expansion modules are cheaper than actual RDIMMs or have comparable costs.


For now, Micron has announced sample availability, and it is unclear when the company will start to ship its CZ120 memory expansion modules commercially. Micron claims that it has already tested its modules with major server platform developers, so right now, its customers are probably validating and qualifying the modules with their machines and workloads, so it is reasonable to expect CZ120 to be deployed already in 2024.


We have been developing and testing our CZ120 memory expansion modules utilizing both Intel and AMD platforms capable of supporting the CXL standard,” added Makineni. “Our product innovation coupled with our collaborative efforts with the CXL ecosystem will enable faster acceptance of this new standard, as we work collectively to meet the ever-growing demands of data centers and their memory-intensive workloads.



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