a teardown of Huawei´s KunPeng 930 by creator Kurnal on YouTube and BiliBili shows a large package roughly 77.5 mm by 58.0 mm that pairs dense compute tiles manufactured at TSMC´s 5 nm node with a sizable input/output die produced at SMIC on a more mature node, possibly 14 nm. this hybrid split is designed to concentrate SRAM density and core scaling on the leading-edge node while shifting I/O and routing to a foundry that can absorb volume and ease supply pressure.
each compute tile contains forty Arm-derived cores tuned as the Taishan family, and platforms can be configured as dual-die SKUs to reach a maximum of 80 cores. the compute tiles include a pair of private 2 MB L2 caches per core and about 91 MB of shared L3 cache on the same die, a significant increase over the previous generation. DDR5 memory controllers are present on the compute tiles, and Huawei diagrams indicate 12 memory channels per chiplet, resulting in a theoretical total of 24 channels per processor. the photographed board shows sixteen DIMM sockets, which implies that not every theoretical memory channel is routed in the shown implementation.
the I/O die offers broad connectivity, with teardown images indicating the platform was designed for up to 96 PCIe lanes, although the photographed board exposes roughly 80 lanes due to routing and cost trade-offs. using an SMIC-made I/O die would ease volume production but will likely require firmware and software tuning to extract peak performance. at this stage, the teardown provides hardware and floorplan details but does not include server-centric benchmark results, so real-world performance and platform tuning remain to be seen.