WP Moar Speed
View all WP Moar Speed

Vultr Plans and Processors

Content Error or Suggest an Edit

Notice a grammatical error or technical inaccuracy? Let us know; we will give you credit!

Introduction

This page is to help everyone understand what processors you’re actually getting with each Vultr Plan.

I’ve taken a single source of data from multiple sources as it’s hard to find lots of information on processors and even performance scores.

Each title has a SC score, just as a reference. I thought this would be helpful.

WARNING

The information held in this article is only for research, it shouldn’t be used as otherwise. Manging WP is not resposible for any of the information below, use it at your own risk. Don’t be stupid.

Vultr Plans and CPU’s

Regular Performance

Vultr provides the following description for their Regular Performance line compute

“Powered by previous generation Intel CPUs and regular SSD.”

Intel Broadwell Regular Performance (SC 400-700)

Intel Broadwell is Intel’s 5th generation Core microarchitecture and was released in 2014. This configuration is likely referring to an Intel Xeon E5-2620 v4 or a similar processor from the Broadwell microarchitecture, which succeeded the Haswell microarchitecture, and was released around 2016.

You can view all the Geekbench test for Vultr Broadwell CPU’s at https://browser.geekbench.com/search?q=vultr+broadwell

Source: https://browser.geekbench.com/v5/cpu/20854244

Name	Intel Core (Broadwell, no TSX, IBRS)
Topology	1 Processor, 1 Core
Base Frequency	2.40 GHz
Cluster 1	0 Cores
L1 Instruction Cache	32.0 KB x 1
L1 Data Cache	32.0 KB x 1
L2 Cache	4.00 MB x 1
L3 Cache	16.0 MB x 1

Intel Skylake Regular Performance (SC 497)

Intel Skylake is Intel’s 6th generation Core microarchitecture and was released in 2015. This configuration is likely referring to an Intel Xeon Silver 4110 or a similar processor from the Skylake microarchitecture, which succeeded the Broadwell microarchitecture, and was released around 2017.

Source: https://browser.geekbench.com/v6/cpu/7452797

Name	Intel Xeon (Skylake, IBRS)
Topology	1 Processor, 1 Core
Base Frequency	2.59 GHz
Cluster 1	0 Cores
L1 Instruction Cache	32.0 KB x 1
L1 Data Cache	32.0 KB x 1
L2 Cache	4.00 MB x 1
L3 Cache	16.0 MB x 1

Intel Cascade Lake (SC: 1042)

Cascade Lake is Intel’s 2nd generation Xeon Scalable Processor microarchitecture and was released in 2019. This configuration is likely referring to an Intel Xeon Silver 4210, 4214, or a similar processor from the Cascade Lake microarchitecture, which succeeded the Skylake microarchitecture. Given that this is a VPS instance, it’s typical for only one core and thread to be allocated, even though the underlying processor has many more cores. This setup was likely released around 2019.

https://browser.geekbench.com/v6/cpu/4260839

Name	Intel Xeon Processor (Cascadelake)
Topology	1 Processor, 1 Core
Identifier	GenuineIntel Family 6 Model 85 Stepping 6
Base Frequency	2.99 GHz
L1 Instruction Cache	32.0 KB x 1
L1 Data Cache	32.0 KB x 1
L2 Cache	4.00 MB x 1
L3 Cache	16.0 MB x 1

High Performance

Vultr provides the following description for their High Performance line compute instances.

“Powered by new generations of AMD EPYC or Intel Xeon CPUs and NVMe SSD.”

Intel Cascade Lake High Performance (SC: 800-900)

Cascade Lake is Intel’s 2nd generation Xeon Scalable Processor microarchitecture and was released in 2019. This configuration is likely referring to an Intel Xeon Silver 4210, 4214, or a similar processor from the Cascade Lake microarchitecture, which succeeded the Skylake microarchitecture. Given that this is a VPS instance, it’s typical for only one core and thread to be allocated, even though the underlying processor has many more cores. This setup was likely released around 2019.

Source: https://browser.geekbench.com/v5/cpu/16219473

Name	Intel Xeon (Cascadelake)
Topology	1 Processor, 1 Core
Base Frequency	2.99 GHz
L1 Instruction Cache	32.0 KB x 1
L1 Data Cache	32.0 KB x 1
L2 Cache	4.00 MB x 1
L3 Cache	16.0 MB x 1

AMD EPYC Rome High Performance (SC: 1038)

Released in 2019. Rome processors are part of AMD’s EPYC series, representing the 2nd generation of their server processors, offering significant improvements in core count and performance over the first generation.

    Source: https://browser.geekbench.com/v6/cpu/7452971/

    Name	AMD EPYC-Rome Processor
    Topology	1 Processor, 1 Core
    Identifier	AuthenticAMD Family 23 Model 49 Stepping 0
    Base Frequency	2.00 GHz
    Cluster 1	0 Cores
    L1 Instruction Cache	32.0 KB x 1
    L1 Data Cache	32.0 KB x 1
    L2 Cache	512 KB x 1
    L3 Cache	16.0 MB x 1

    AMD EPYC Milan High Performance (SC: 1038)

    Rome is AMD’s 2nd generation EPYC processor microarchitecture and was released in 2019. This configuration is likely referring to an AMD EPYC 700a2 series processor or a similar model from the Rome microarchitecture, which succeeded the Naples microarchitecture, and was released around 2019.

    Source: https://browser.geekbench.com/v5/cpu/21903722

    Name	AMD EPYC-Milan
    Topology	1 Processor, 1 Core, 2 Threads
    Base Frequency	3.25 GHz
    Cluster 1	0 Cores
    L1 Instruction Cache	32.0 KB x 1
    L1 Data Cache	32.0 KB x 1
    L2 Cache	512 KB x 1
    L3 Cache	32.0 MB x 1

    High Frequency

    Vultr provides the following description for their High Frequency compute instances

    “Powered by new generations of AMD EPYC or Intel Xeon CPUs and NVMe SSD.”

    Intel Skylake High Frequency (SC: 1292)

    Released in 2015. Skylake is part of Intel’s 6th generation Core and Xeon processor families, offering improvements in performance, power efficiency, and graphics over previous generations.

      This configuration likely suggests this is the Intel Xeon E3-1500 v5 or v6 series.

      Source: https://browser.geekbench.com/v5/cpu/21127856

      Name	Intel Core (Skylake, IBRS)
      Topology	1 Processor, 2 Cores, 4 Threads
      Base Frequency	3.79 GHz
      Cluster 1	0 Cores
      L1 Instruction Cache	32.0 KB x 4
      L1 Data Cache	32.0 KB x 4
      L2 Cache	4.00 MB x 2
      L3 Cache	16.0 MB x 1

      Optimized Cloud Compute

      Vultr provides the following description for their High Frequency compute instances.

      These virtual machines run atop fully dedicated, new generation AMD EPYC vCPUs. Dedicated vCPUs ensure that these machines deliver the fast, consistent performance that many business applications require.

      AMD EPYC Rome CPU Optimized (SC:1281)

      Released in 2019. Rome processors are part of AMD’s EPYC series, representing the 2nd generation of their server processors, offering significant improvements in core count and performance over the first generation.

      This configuration likely corresponds to an entry-level AMD EPYC 7251 or a similar model within the Rome family. The EPYC 7251 is a part of AMD’s EPYC 7001 series (Rome) processors, which were released in 2019.

      Source: https://browser.geekbench.com/v5/cpu/20117410

      Name	AMD EPYC-Rome
      Topology	1 Processor, 1 Core
      Base Frequency	2.79 GHz
      L1 Instruction Cache	32.0 KB x 1
      L1 Data Cache	32.0 KB x 1
      L2 Cache	512 KB x 1
      L3 Cache	16.0 MB x 1

      AMD EPYC Milan CPU Optimized (SC: 1401)

      Release in 2021 the AMD EPYC Milan processors, which are part of the third generation of EPYC CPUs.

      This configuration likely corresponds to a low-core, high-frequency variant of the AMD EPYC 7xF3 series within the Milan family. Milan processors are part of AMD’s third-generation EPYC lineup, released in 2021 and based on the Zen 3 architecture.

      Source: https://browser.geekbench.com/v5/cpu/22054408

      Name	AMD EPYC-Milan
      Topology	1 Processor, 1 Core, 2 Threads
      Base Frequency	3.25 GHz
      Cluster 1	0 Cores
      L1 Instruction Cache	32.0 KB x 1
      L1 Data Cache	32.0 KB x 1
      L2 Cache	512 KB x 1
      L3 Cache	32.0 MB x 1

      Conclusion

      I think it’s important to note what processor you’re getting when purchasing any sort of compute, even though it’s called a VPS, Cloud or any other buzz terminology. These compute instances are virtualized servers, on top of hardware that might be 10 years old. So just be aware that these process will act differently under a WordPress load.

      0 Shares:

      Comments are closed.