- Elkhart Lake
- Tiger Lake
- Kaby Lake R
- Whiskey Lake
- Comet Lake
- Coffee Lake
- Gemini Lake
- Gemini Lake Refresh
- Jasper Lake
- Ice Lake
- Amber Lake Y
- Coffee Lake
- Lakefield
- Rocket Lake
- Alder Lake
- Kaby Lake G
- Skylake
- Kaby Lake
- Cascade Lake
- Amber Lake
- Pallock
- Dali
- Picasso
- Raven Ridge
- Rome
- Milan
- Matisse
- Pinnacle Ridge
- Renoir
- Lucienne
However, I never really finished going through AMD codenames as all cores are either Zen(+), Zen 2 or Zen 3, so I simplified on that.
So based on the overlap, it seems Gemini Lake (but without sha instructions) is the Common Denominator and this is actually better than x86-64-v2 (but if you target that, you are still fully compatible, just that you don't use all of the instructions that are common to all supported Windows 11 computers. These are the supported features common to all supported Windows 11 CPUs:
target_feature="aes"
target_feature="cmpxchg16b"
target_feature="fxsr"
target_feature="lahfsahf"
target_feature="movbe"
target_feature="pclmulqdq"
target_feature="popcnt"
target_feature="rdrand"
target_feature="rdseed"
target_feature="sse"
target_feature="sse2"
target_feature="sse3"
target_feature="sse4.1"
target_feature="sse4.2"
target_feature="ssse3"
target_feature="xsave"
target_feature="xsavec"
target_feature="xsaveopt"
target_feature="xsaves"
Sadly, AVX and AVX2 support is not common to all Windows 11 CPUs due to Atom chips and segmentation in the Pentium and Celeron lineup until Tiger Lake. So you need to use it behind feature test or not use it at all if you just want portable SIMD code
Microsoft is ensuring new OEM machines have a cut down list of supported processors for Windows 11 24H2. Note that this means that Windows still supports these processors and you can upgrade to 24H2 from older Windows 11 builds just fine or even install a new copy of Windows 11. Just that, OEM companies (HP, Dell, etc) can't sell new machines with these processors with Windows 11 24H2. As such, this is for reference only, and you should support older processors listed above. Instead, this can provide some speculation the minimum processors that Windows 12 could require (though it may require the same processors as Windows 11 as well. Right now this is all just speculation)
These CPU generations are removed for Intel:
This leaves quite a few oddities. First, Ice Lake is removed but not Rocket Lake (which is based on Sunny Cove being backported to 14 nm as Cypress Cove). Elkhart Lake is removed but not Jasper Lake (both based on Tremont and as such, no AVX2 sadly). This isn't even a cut-off based on launch Elkhart Lake and Jasper Lake both launched in 2021.
This leaves these CPUs supported from launch to 24h2 for OEMs:
For AMD, all generations of Zen are still supported (I just checked on Zen versions like Zen(+), Zen 2, etc rather than individual product names such as Picasso)
As such, the only change is that the SHA instruction is now supported in all 24H2 OEM machines.