Discussion Intel current and future Lakes & Rapids thread

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jpiniero

Lifer
Oct 1, 2010
14,510
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I dunno if gutting L2$ would net them any speed back, since AMD's clocks pretty fast.

It'd be more for space than performance. Rocket Lake, if it's Willow Cove the 10 core is going to be so big. Yield wise it shouldn't be a problem, especially if it's chiplets but the wafers it eats could be an issue.
 

Yotsugi

Golden Member
Oct 16, 2017
1,029
487
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possible, it wouldn't surprise me if Intel enabled the ability to cut the L2 in half in all cores for yield reasons.
SRAM is easy to yield, and with gigantic iGPU which can eat defect and getting binned, yield is not the answer.
 

gdansk

Golden Member
Feb 8, 2011
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It's promising but the current state is not impressive, because of the low clock rates squandering the IPC increase. And the 1065G7 is equipped with 3733MHz memory compared to 2133MHz? Odd.

The integrated graphics are more impressive. But a comparison to Vega 11 would be interesting, despite its memory bandwidth disadvantage.
 

ajc9988

Senior member
Apr 1, 2015
278
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I dunno what he was talking about, but IPC varies with clocks.
By definition that statement makes no sense.

IPC is instructions per cycle. Frequency is cycles per second. So clocks, as you put it, do not effect the instructions per cycle, but instead the number of cycles in a period, here in one second, which is the frequency of the cycles.

So, through definitions alone, changing clocks, meaning frequency, has no effect whatever on IPC and only effects the frequency of cycles per second.

Does it effect performance? Yes because it increased the number of cycles per second. But it does NOT effect the number of instructions per cycle.
 

gdansk

Golden Member
Feb 8, 2011
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What's odd about LPDDR4x being fast?
Nothing odd about it being fast but it's not very interesting for desktop folks. Many are already running memory that fast so the small improvements in application performance would be even smaller in reality.
 

Yotsugi

Golden Member
Oct 16, 2017
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Nothing odd about it being fast but it's not very interesting for desktop folks since many of us are already running memory that fast so the small improvements in application performance would be even smaller in reality.
The main good thing about LPDDR isn't performance, but its low power idle and deep sleep states.
 

gdansk

Golden Member
Feb 8, 2011
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The main good thing about LPDDR isn't performance, but its low power idle and deep sleep states.
I'm sure the 75% higher memory bandwidth is why they went with it. They delayed doing it until the power issues with LPDDR4 were sorted out. JEDEC (PDF) claims up to 40% lower pj/bit with LPDDR4X vs LPDDR4. But with the all the added bits per second it ends up about about equal in power consumption with LPDDR3.
 
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Thunder 57

Platinum Member
Aug 19, 2007
2,647
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It's promising but the current state is not impressive, because of the low clock rates squandering the IPC increase. And the 1065G7 is equipped with 3733MHz memory compared to 2133MHz? Odd.

The integrated graphics are more impressive. But a comparison to Vega 11 would be interesting, despite its memory bandwidth disadvantage.

I have to say when I saw the SPEC numbers I was like, wow, looks like it might be a winner. Then came the real world tests and it's much more meh. As a whole package, it's pretty good. But only looking at CPU performance it's rather... meh. I think that 10nm+ is killing them clock speed wise.

Then there's the fact that it looks like there may be no desktop 10nm. Everything I've seen points to Intel sticking with 14nm++ until 7nm drops in 2021, assuming they make the date this time.
 

NostaSeronx

Diamond Member
Sep 18, 2011
3,683
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I'll give you all a shrug out of a shrug.

"
IbXgVw0.png


Member of the CPU Logic Design team, worked on the uarch and RTL design of a next-generation VISC CPU core. => Part of Intel’s Big Core team, worked on next-generation, high-performance x86-based CPU cores.

From Soft Machines to Intel CPU Core group, new generation Core projects"
----
I fully expect a monstrosity of the likes the world has never seen before. The patents related to the supposed architecture are pending or granted at Intel. For what its worth its been done since the end of 2018. So, how long does it usually take to see an architecture?

16nm High Performance, High IPC VISC core w/ ARMv8-64 compatibility to Intel x86-64.
-> More IPC than Skylake with similar clock ranges of the then M-series/Y-series, and U-series.
 
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ajc9988

Senior member
Apr 1, 2015
278
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I can't be bothered to link Andrei so whatever.

You see, your memory does not go faster if you up the CPU clockrate.
Hence why IPC varies with it.
Are you talking memory frequency or CPU frequency? IPC can be influenced by memory frequency, but not by CPU frequency. That has to do with latency reduction and keeping cache feed through bandwidth, etc.

I will admit, I was skimming earlier. But if you meant CPU frequency effects IPC, you are incorrect.
 

Zucker2k

Golden Member
Feb 15, 2006
1,810
1,159
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I don't know what's funny because 1 CYCLE = 1 CLOCK CYCLE. Power budget is not a consideration in an IPC test. Jesus!!

I dunno what he was talking about, but IPC varies with clocks.
I'm happy you said this, at least, and not that IPC is determined by power budget.

CPU freq affects your average IPC because your memory doesn't go faster together with CPU.
This is easily solved by making sure the memory subsystem is not a bottleneck in your test. Or, you could simply stick to manufacturer specs.
 

itsmydamnation

Platinum Member
Feb 6, 2011
2,743
3,075
136
.


This is easily solved by making sure the memory subsystem is not a bottleneck in your test. Or, you could simply stick to manufacturer specs.

That statement is like completely wrong, throughput for IPC is largely irrelevant, access latency is not.
 

krumme

Diamond Member
Oct 9, 2009
5,952
1,585
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At the current outlook:
What is the first product we will see on high perf desktop?
Process?
When?
 

DrMrLordX

Lifer
Apr 27, 2000
21,582
10,785
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This is easily solved by making sure the memory subsystem is not a bottleneck in your test.

Depends on whether you want synthetic or "real world" data.

Some workloads can fit in cache. Assuming the cache scales with clockspeed, then the memory subsystem is not going to affect IPC testing.
Some workloads do not fit in cache. Now the memory subsystem is going to affect testing. If existing implementations of a particular uarch feature poor memory controller performance then obviously that will affect IPC testing.

Something like SuperPi 32m is affected by memory. Something like CBR20, less so.
 
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SAAA

Senior member
May 14, 2014
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CPU freq affects your average IPC because your memory doesn't go faster together with CPU.

I was always curious of this notion so today I quickly tested with CPU-z to check if the myth stands (on a 8700k):

IPCscaling.png

There's at best a 2% difference in scores running from 4.5 to 2.5 GHz fixed in bios, same RAM speed and timings. Myth busted?
Well for this benchmark sure, maybe at 5GHz it decreases noticeably but I won't test that with my crappy cooling… anyone interested open another thread and find out with more benches, also more CPUs!
 
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mikk

Diamond Member
May 15, 2012
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There's at best a 2% difference in scores running from 4.5 to 2.5 GHz fixed in bios, same RAM speed and timings. Myth busted?
Well for this benchmark sure, maybe at 5GHz it decreases noticeably but I won't test that with my crappy cooling… anyone interested open another thread and find out with more benches, also more CPUs!


Cinebench isn't memory sensitive, there is no surprise in your test.
 

Andrei.

Senior member
Jan 26, 2015
316
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I was always curious of this notion so today I quickly tested with CPU-z to check if the myth stands (on a 8700k):

View attachment 9143

There's at best a 2% difference in scores running from 4.5 to 2.5 GHz fixed in bios, same RAM speed and timings. Myth busted?
Well for this benchmark sure, maybe at 5GHz it decreases noticeably but I won't test that with my crappy cooling… anyone interested open another thread and find out with more benches, also more CPUs!
Yes CPU-Z and CB - both known to have tons of memory pressure amirite?

IPC should only be measured at peak performance of a chip because that's the only data-point that matters. Everything below that will artificially inflate IPC because you're essentially improving memory cycles by an equal amount to the clock reduction.