Speculation: Ryzen 4000 series/Zen 3

Page 88 - Seeking answers? Join the AnandTech community: where nearly half-a-million members share solutions and discuss the latest tech.

eek2121

Platinum Member
Aug 2, 2005
2,904
3,906
136
I was considering snagging a 3900X at $399, but I may just wait for the 4900X or whatever chip has an oversized L3$ per core for my DC workload if the IPC really does hit a 15% boost and the power draw is essentially the same. An IPC gain of 15% tells me they're probably not going to N7P, but rather N7+, even though it seems like they're trying to backtrack on their slides.

No, it will be N7P. AMD has already stated this and they have also shown shown that there is plenty of performance to be had from optimizations. Look at Vega vs Renoir and Navi vs next gen. I strongly suspect that this next gen is all about power/performance optimizations, clock speeds, and feature enhancements.
 

Veradun

Senior member
Jul 29, 2016
564
780
136
No, it will be N7P. AMD has already stated this and they have also shown shown that there is plenty of performance to be had from optimizations. Look at Vega vs Renoir and Navi vs next gen. I strongly suspect that this next gen is all about power/performance optimizations, clock speeds, and feature enhancements.
When did they say it will be N7P?
 

uzzi38

Platinum Member
Oct 16, 2019
2,565
5,575
146
They didn’t, they did, however, say it wouldn’t be N7+. GPUs and the Xbox APU are N7P. Zen 3 is a safe bet.
That's incorrect. AMD did not say it won't be N7+. They said they're following TSMC's nomenclature, which after the change includes N7, N7+ and N7P all under the name of '7nm'.
 

uzzi38

Platinum Member
Oct 16, 2019
2,565
5,575
146
Seems like a Renoir laptop might be being sold in China. This is a review of one such laptop, but according to a friend the ASUS TUF A15 4800H+2060 with 8GB VRAM, 512GB SSD and 144Hz panel is selling for 7300 Yuan, and the Acer Switft 3 14" with a 4500U, 16GB RAM and a 512GB SSD is selling for 4000Yuan.

Anyway, here's the review:

 

amrnuke

Golden Member
Apr 24, 2019
1,181
1,772
136
They didn’t, they did, however, say it wouldn’t be N7+. GPUs and the Xbox APU are N7P. Zen 3 is a safe bet.
That's not at all what they said. They said they removed N7+ because TSMC considers N7P, N7+, and N7 to all be the same process group, and AMD want to make sure they are following that same nomenclature to reduce confusion. In reality, they did it to obscure what process they are going to use, since there is a sizeable performance difference between N7P and N7+.

As for Xbox APU, it is N7P because tools are portable from N7, on which Zen2 is based. Since Xbox APU is Zen2 based, it makes sense to use N7P because it's a simple transition, rather than retooling Zen2 on N7+.

For the GPU, I'm not sure if you're implying RDNA1 is on N7P or the GPU on the APU for Xbox is N7P. Of course if the CPU in the Xbox is N7P, it would be kind of hard, on the same silicon, to have the GPU portion be N7+ wouldn't it?

Here is my hypothesis, since neither you nor I actually "know" what the truth is:

- the APUs in the Xbox is N7P because Xbox APU is Zen2 based, and it makes no sense to retool; N7P allows port of Zen2 directly, N7+ doesn't
- Zen3 could easily be N7+ because they are doing a heavy makeover of the front-end and core interconnect, so there is no reason to tie Zen3 down to a dead-end N7P node when N7+ yields are excellent and N7+ ostensibly offers better performance (and an easy port to N5 should they choose to do so)
 
  • Like
Reactions: Elfear

RetroZombie

Senior member
Nov 5, 2019
464
386
96
An IPC increase of only 15% would be disappointing, in light of what Forrest Norrod has said about Zen 3.
Add some clock speed increase and also some all core boost clock increase and you already have 25%.
If you consider all this is in just one year, that's a lot.

The intel boring days of 5% improvements per year are over, so i understand that everyone now excepts DOUBLES from amd all the time.
 
  • Like
Reactions: NTMBK

rainy

Senior member
Jul 17, 2013
505
424
136
An IPC increase of only 15% would be disappointing, in light of what Forrest Norrod has said about Zen 3.

What sort of gains you've expected - 20-25 percent or maybe even 30?
30 percent increase of IPC for two consecutive Zen generations would be pretty impressive IMO.

Btw, to just remind you - Intel was able to achieve circa 23 percent with Ivy Bridge, Haswell, Broadwell and Skylake combined.
 

inf64

Diamond Member
Mar 11, 2011
3,685
3,957
136
We have had several leaks saying 15+%. Charlie is the most prominent one. Also we had a leak that stated that FP(SIMD) performance is 50% higher Vs Zen2 which is massive.
Whatever the case is, AMD just practically erased whatever IPC inroad intel got with Sunny Cove. Suny Cove has roughly 10-11% higher IPC Vs Zen2, so Zen3 goes beyond Icelake parts and TGL (since TGL has no tangible IPC gains). Next year we should have Zen4 that is more like Zen1->Zen2 transition , so intel is in a a very very bad spot.
 

tamz_msc

Diamond Member
Jan 5, 2017
3,710
3,554
136
Add some clock speed increase and also some all core boost clock increase and you already have 25%.
If you consider all this is in just one year, that's a lot.

The intel boring days of 5% improvements per year are over, so i understand that everyone now excepts DOUBLES from amd all the time.
What sort of gains you've expected - 20-25 percent or maybe even 30?
30 percent increase of IPC for two consecutive Zen generations would be pretty impressive IMO.

Btw, to just remind you - Intel was able to achieve circa 23 percent with Ivy Bridge, Haswell, Broadwell and Skylake combined.
When the lead server guy says that Zen 2 was more of an evolution of Zen and says that one should expect gains right in line with what is expected from a new architecture, 15 percent isn't enough. In other words, hyping up Zen 3 and then only achieving what Zen 2 managed over Zen would be immensely disappointing.

What Intel is doing is irrelevant.
 

RetroZombie

Senior member
Nov 5, 2019
464
386
96
gains right in line with what is expected from a new architecture
I don't really know his words or what sense he might have said that. But any of this would achieve that:
- New I/O die, more power efficient leaving more power available to the cpu cores (higher clocks at same tdp)​
- 4S systems, serverthehome have one article where they mention the cpu sockets can be connected with only 32 pcie lanes instead of the 64.​
- New I/O die with 16 channel imc, would give even more performance.​
- More chiplets/more cores, theres space for that but would require the more power efficient i/o die and more efficient IF chiplet interconnect​

They could release an even higher end epyc 8000/9000 series with more stuff like the above, because the arm guys are getting closer.
 
  • Like
Reactions: lightmanek

maddie

Diamond Member
Jul 18, 2010
4,723
4,628
136
I don't really know his words or what sense he might have said that. But any of this would achieve that:
- New I/O die, more power efficient leaving more power available to the cpu cores (higher clocks at same tdp)​
- 4S systems, serverthehome have one article where they mention the cpu sockets can be connected with only 32 pcie lanes instead of the 64.​
- New I/O die with 16 channel imc, would give even more performance.​
- More chiplets/more cores, theres space for that but would require the more power efficient i/o die and more efficient IF chiplet interconnect​

They could release an even higher end epyc 8000/9000 series with more stuff like the above, because the arm guys are getting closer.
We are already getting glimpses into what the improvements might be as seen in this slide. Some of these techniques are almost certain to be used in Zen3 for power savings.

2%20AMD%20Ryzen%20Mobile%20Tech%20Day_General%20Session_Architecture%20Deep%20Dive-page-014.jpg
 
  • Like
Reactions: RetroZombie

rainy

Senior member
Jul 17, 2013
505
424
136
When the lead server guy says that Zen 2 was more of an evolution of Zen and says that one should expect gains right in line with what is expected from a new architecture, 15 percent isn't enough. In other words, hyping up Zen 3 and then only achieving what Zen 2 managed over Zen would be immensely disappointing.

I would not exclude possibility that AMD could deliver 15-20 percent improvement over Zen 2, however it seems to me that your expectations are unrealistically high - something like 30 percent or maybe even more.
 

Atari2600

Golden Member
Nov 22, 2016
1,409
1,655
136
When the lead server guy says that Zen 2 was more of an evolution of Zen and says that one should expect gains right in line with what is expected from a new architecture, 15 percent isn't enough. In other words, hyping up Zen 3 and then only achieving what Zen 2 managed over Zen would be immensely disappointing.

Ahh, we'd need to be very careful there - what was the context of that?

Given Zen2 seen the biggest memory architecture upheaval since Hammer, is he referring to the core alone (leaving out uncore)? Which funnily enough, would be quite similar to Hammer vs. Barton.
 

soresu

Platinum Member
Dec 19, 2014
2,617
1,812
136
I would not exclude possibility that AMD could deliver 15-20 percent improvement over Zen 2, however it seems to me that your expectations are unrealistically high - something like 30 percent or maybe even more.
I wouldn't expect 30% IPC gains on average - but 30-40% perf/watt gain through increased design efficiency, process and IPC seems achievable, not to mention awesome.
 
  • Like
Reactions: lightmanek

Caveman

Platinum Member
Nov 18, 1999
2,525
33
91
Can one of you good folks in the know advise on how much faster the Zen 4? will be relative to Intel's 9900k? Will it be maybe 20% faster, and when will it be available. Targeting a build for this fall and wanting to know what the fastest AMD solution will be around then... Primary use is single core flight simulation.
 

maddie

Diamond Member
Jul 18, 2010
4,723
4,628
136
Can one of you good folks in the know advise on how much faster the Zen 4? will be relative to Intel's 9900k? Will it be maybe 20% faster, and when will it be available. Targeting a build for this fall and wanting to know what the fastest AMD solution will be around then... Primary use is single core flight simulation.
Trying for humor?
 

scannall

Golden Member
Jan 1, 2012
1,944
1,638
136
Can one of you good folks in the know advise on how much faster the Zen 4? will be relative to Intel's 9900k? Will it be maybe 20% faster, and when will it be available. Targeting a build for this fall and wanting to know what the fastest AMD solution will be around then... Primary use is single core flight simulation.
While it will likely be faster, until parts are on the shelves and in reviewers hands take all the leaks and speculation with a grain of salt. That goes with any product or manufacturer btw.
 

exquisitechar

Senior member
Apr 18, 2017
655
862
136
Can one of you good folks in the know advise on how much faster the Zen 4? will be relative to Intel's 9900k? Will it be maybe 20% faster, and when will it be available. Targeting a build for this fall and wanting to know what the fastest AMD solution will be around then... Primary use is single core flight simulation.
Ryzen 4000 series is Zen 3. Nothing concrete has been publicly revealed yet performance wise, but you can expect a 20+% performance uplift compared to Zen 2 equivalent CPUs, the fastest of which are slightly slower than a 9900k in single thread performance. No one really knows about availability either, but a Q3 2020 launch is likely.
 

Caveman

Platinum Member
Nov 18, 1999
2,525
33
91
Ryzen 4000 series is Zen 3. Nothing concrete has been publicly revealed yet performance wise, but you can expect a 20+% performance uplift compared to Zen 2 equivalent CPUs, the fastest of which are slightly slower than a 9900k in single thread performance. No one really knows about availability either, but a Q3 2020 launch is likely.
Thanks so much spelling this out... So, it sounds like I could shoot for a Zen 3 (same as Ryzen 4000) late this fall with expectations of at least a 10% performance over fastest Intel chip good for flight simulation AND pick up a ridiculous amount of multi-core speed as a bonus. As a follow on... Are the MoBos for Zen3 going to be new so that if I switch to AMD for Zen 3 (4770k right now), I may be able to continue on an upgrade path for another 1-2 CPU releases from intel? Does all this sound about right... I've been "out of the ballpark" for a while and so much has changed... My last AMD build was an Athlon :)
 

exquisitechar

Senior member
Apr 18, 2017
655
862
136
Thanks so much spelling this out... So, it sounds like I could shoot for a Zen 3 (same as Ryzen 4000) late this fall with expectations of at least a 10% performance over fastest Intel chip good for flight simulation AND pick up a ridiculous amount of multi-core speed as a bonus. As a follow on... Are the MoBos for Zen3 going to be new so that if I switch to AMD for Zen 3 (4770k right now), I may be able to continue on an upgrade path for another 1-2 CPU releases from intel? Does all this sound about right... I've been "out of the ballpark" for a while and so much has changed... My last AMD build was an Athlon :)
Most likely, Zen 3 will be on the AM4 socket, same as Zen and Zen 2. It may be the last generation on that socket, though, so be prepared to buy another motherboard, whether you choose AMD or Intel, for your next upgrade after Zen 3.
 

Gideon

Golden Member
Nov 27, 2007
1,608
3,573
136
Looking at the PS5 and Xbox Series X coverage, I really hope these hardware compression/decompression and memory copying blocks also make it into CPUs. These would be obviously useful for games (getting hundreds of gigabytes of on-demand video memory with fetching times in hundreds of milliseconds for 1-2GB assets) but it would also help in servers.

There are plenty of bandwidth bound tasks that could benefit from such a dedicated memory compression (both IO and memory-bandwidth limited). For SSD <-> CPU you could also do software compression, but it would still waste a lot of resources (6+ cores per 4 PCIe 4.0 lanes). For memory compression it just isn't possible (the throughput is too high).

AMD could implement the memory compression similarly to how they already implement SME memory encryption, only for selected memory pages, where data benefits from it the most (user selected).

They might need different algorithms for I/O and memory though. I/O is fine with Kraken, but memory might need a faster algorithm. Hopefully 3.5x faster Selkie is enough:
oodle_typical_vbar.png


Anyway, i really hope hardware fixed blocks for compression/decompression are added to PCs similarily to next-gen consoles
 

RetroZombie

Senior member
Nov 5, 2019
464
386
96
but memory might need a faster algorithm
Gideon could you please explain those charts, i'm looking at them and don't understand them. What is the base? What kind of data is being compressed/decompressed?
Maybe it's obvious, but i simple don't understand the scale is it by time or by data compression size?
 

RetroZombie

Senior member
Nov 5, 2019
464
386
96
They said they're following TSMC's nomenclature, which after the change includes N7, N7+ and N7P all under the name of '7nm'.
But what process was it?
I thought N7+ and N7P was the same process, the P being an abbreviation of Plus. It seams it isn't?

Amd said they were going to use tsmc 7nm HPC, which is better known by...?
 

uzzi38

Platinum Member
Oct 16, 2019
2,565
5,575
146
But what process was it?
I thought N7+ and N7P was the same process, the P being an abbreviation of Plus. It seams it isn't?

Amd said they were going to use tsmc 7nm HPC, which is better known by...?
N7+ is uses a few EUV layers.

N7P is still entirely DUV.

N7 HPC is just N7. N7 has diffferent libraries of diffing densities, N7 HPC is slightly more relaxed in density to allow for better clocks.
 
  • Like
Reactions: moinmoin