Seven new PCI IDs have been added to the Linux kernel, depicting upcoming processors from Intel (viaTomasz Gawroński). The image suggests preliminary enablement for Panther Lake, Wildcat Lake, Nova Lake, and Razer Lake CPUs is underway. This leak does not necessarily indicate that all these processors will be released. However, the consistency of family codenames with previous leaks suggests they could see the light of day.

The shared snippet details code allows the Linux kernel to recognize and work with these new CPUs. PCI IDs or Peripheral Component Interconnect IDs are unique codes used to identify devices connected to a system. The listed processors include several shorthands: LNL: Lunar Lake, PTL: Panther Lake, NVL: Nova Lake, WCL: Wildcat Lake, and RZL: Razer Lake. Suffixes appended after the dash depict the market segment or specific features: P: Performance (Mobile), H: Highest performance (Mobile), S: Desktop, M: Thin and lightweight (Mobile).

Intel Raptor Lake

We have Panther Lake in P and H variants, with varying TDPs, samples of which arereportedlyalready powered on at eight customers.Previous leakssuggest a low-power U-version as well. Similarly, PTL-H isrumoredto offer up to 16 cores and a 12 Xe3-core-based iGPU (Integrated GPU). Next up is Nova Lake, said to be Intel’s next major desktop release and expected to launch by 2026-27. Moving on, the suffix-lessWildcat Lakeis rumored to succeed current-gen Alder Lake-N and Twin Lake CPUs for mini-PCs and low-power systems.

Last on the list is the rumoredRazer Lake, following Nova Lake in Intel’s product stack. RZL-M, likely the successor to Lunar Lake, has been identified, but interestingly, there’s no mention of RZL-S for desktop. Since Intelrejectedan on-package memory approach for future CPUs, Razer Lake-M might adopt a different strategy. Of course, this list is incomplete, and expect a barrage of changes as final specifications are hammered out.

Intel PCI IDs

The CPUs are years away, except for Panther Lake and Wildcat Lake. Panther Lake, fabricated on the bleeding-edge Intel 18A node, will launch this year and may be announced atComputexone year after Lunar Lake.

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Hassam Nasir

Hassam Nasir is a die-hard hardware enthusiast with years of experience as a tech editor and writer, focusing on detailed CPU comparisons and general hardware news. When he’s not working, you’ll find him bending tubes for his ever-evolving custom water-loop gaming rig or benchmarking the latest CPUs and GPUs just for fun.