13th Generation Intel® Core™, Intel® Core™ 14th Generation, Intel® Core™ Processor (Series 1) and (Series 2), Intel® Xeon™ E 2400 Processor and Intel® Xeon™ 6300 Processor

Datasheet, Volume 1 of 2
Supporting 13th Generation Intel® Core™ Processor for S, H, P, HX, and U Processor Line Platforms, formerly known as Raptor Lake.
Supporting Intel® Core™ 14th Generation Processor for S, HX formerly known As Raptor Lake Refresh.
Supporting Intel® Core™ Processor (Series 1) for U Processor Line Platform, formerly known As Raptor Lake refresh
Supporting Intel® Core™ Processor (Series 2) for H Processor Line Platform, formerly known As Raptor Lake Refresh.
Supporting Intel® Xeon® E 2400 Processor and Intel® Xeon® 6300 Processor, formerly known As Raptor Lake–E Refresh

ID Date Version Classification
743844 05/30/2025 Public
Document Table of Contents

Initialization Role of CKE

During power-up, CKE is the only input to the SDRAM that has its level recognized (other than the reset pin) once power is applied. It should be driven LOW by the DDR controller to make sure the SDRAM components float DQ and DQS during power-up. CKE signals remain LOW (while any reset is active) until the BIOS writes to a configuration register. Using this method, CKE is ensured to remain inactive for much longer than the specified 200 micro-seconds after power and clocks to SDRAM devices are stable. In LPDDR5/DDR5, there is no CKE pin and the power management roll is assumed by the CS signals.