Discussion Zen 5 Speculation (EPYC Turin and Strix Point/Granite Ridge - Ryzen 9000)

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Abwx

Lifer
Apr 2, 2011
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Vanilla Zen6 is all N3p, N2 only for Dense CCD iirc.

Still, they should use a better perf/watt performing process than for Zen 5, there s some usable gain from the process to increase perfs, while Zen 5 should use a good part of its process perf/Watt improvement to compensate for the bigger and inherently lower uarch efficency at isofrequency.
 

A///

Diamond Member
Feb 24, 2017
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Is n2 not when tsmc plans on introducing gaa and backside power delivery?
 

A///

Diamond Member
Feb 24, 2017
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oops, sorry I made an error. pcie5 came with alderlake, a year after it was finalised by pci sig.
 

Abwx

Lifer
Apr 2, 2011
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Very very very very very incremental node improvement.

Now that's the funny bit, AMD tends to deliver 1:1 IPC/Cdyn.

I was talking at isoprocess, you cant compensate the bigger transistor count to achieve a higher IPC by reducing Cdyn on a same process, you ll have forcibly to use a process with lower Cdyn, that is, the next node.

For that matter a 5nm fabbed Zen 3 would be more efficient than Zen 4 at same frequency, but not at same throughput.

Of course for a same throughput one can reduce Zen 4 frequency by 12% and hence reduce its power by roughly 25%, wich more than largely compensate for the lower intrinsical efficency, for instance if intrinsical efficency is say 10% lower Zen 4 will still have 8% better throughput at isopower and isoprocess.
 

Tigerick

Senior member
Apr 1, 2022
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Golden Pig Upgrade pretty much confirmed the specs of Strix Point coming next year.

Hmm, based on total cores with L3 cache improvement and 8WGP (or total 1024 SALU), the die size would be much bigger than 178mm2 of Phoenix Point
 

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A///

Diamond Member
Feb 24, 2017
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If the C in Zen meant dense initially what the heck does a zen5d mean?
 

A///

Diamond Member
Feb 24, 2017
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c stands for cloud and is essentially the PR name, d is dense and is the unofficial name still often used (maybe even internally at AMD seeing how often it still pops up?).
I may be missing something but I can't find any data that makes a difference between the C and the D. Both are stripped down traditional cores to pack up to 16 of them on a compute die. If i search against amd's own website with the worse dense it brings up zen4c.
 

yuri69

Senior member
Jul 16, 2013
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Should be the same as Zen+ to Zen 2 or from this latter to Zen 3, since Zen 5 is supposed to be a bigger departure from Zen 4 than thoses previous itérations we can expect it to be some sort of pipe cleaner like Zen 1 in its time.

If Zen 5 IPC improvement is substancial comparatively to Zen 4 it would be logical that Zen 6 would bring significantly less IPC uplift, they ll surely focus on perf/Watt with a 2nm node jump.
OTOH *if* those hype claims are true - Zen 5 being a radical departure from the old 4-wide Zen design bringing ~20% IPC & being the last gen on the "2010 packaging tech". Then Zen 6 could still bring a nice IPC gains.

First, a fresh architecture always cuts corners meaning its direct successor has plenty of low-hanging fruit. Second, current Zen 4 and probably Zen 5 too are limited by the current IF architecture - having a completely new one could boost a class of workloads.

Also Intel is gonna keep releasing new stuff every year so in 2026 Zen 6 has to bring a substantial perf boost to compete.
 

A///

Diamond Member
Feb 24, 2017
4,351
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OTOH *if* those hype claims are true - Zen 5 being a radical departure from the old 4-wide Zen design bringing ~20% IPC & being the last gen on the "2010 packaging tech". Then Zen 6 could still bring a nice IPC gains.

First, a fresh architecture always cuts corners meaning its direct successor has plenty of low-hanging fruit. Second, current Zen 4 and probably Zen 5 too are limited by the current IF architecture - having a completely new one could boost a class of workloads.

Also Intel is gonna keep releasing new stuff every year so in 2026 Zen 6 has to bring a substantial perf boost to compete.
was there not a rumor of amd going 8 wide and intel going even wider earlier in the year or was that all bs?
 

Abwx

Lifer
Apr 2, 2011
11,885
4,873
136
OTOH *if* those hype claims are true - Zen 5 being a radical departure from the old 4-wide Zen design bringing ~20% IPC & being the last gen on the "2010 packaging tech". Then Zen 6 could still bring a nice IPC gains.

First, a fresh architecture always cuts corners meaning its direct successor has plenty of low-hanging fruit. Second, current Zen 4 and probably Zen 5 too are limited by the current IF architecture - having a completely new one could boost a class of workloads.

Also Intel is gonna keep releasing new stuff every year so in 2026 Zen 6 has to bring a substantial perf boost to compete.
From the tone of Mike Clarck interview Zen 5 should be noticeably above the average level of previous iteration, so 18-20% is possible for Zen 5, but it s likely that Zen 6 will be within the usual uplifts, FTR the average improvement per iteration from Zen to Zen 4 was 13% using Cinebench as metric.

For the time we have not the slightest technically accurate info about the uarch, only that the l1 cache is increased by 25%, the hints given by AMD, re-pipelined front end and wide issue, dont say much without knowing if there s significant changes in the execution engine and LSU, FI if the ALU count is increased to 5 or 6, how much more LS/cycle and width if there s any.
 

PJVol

Senior member
May 25, 2020
854
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As for 1:1, I also don't understand how this is possible. This is Cac distribution for heavily optimized 7nm in Zen2 from their slides. 22% is accounted for clock tree and gaters, and that's just the Core
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