- Mar 3, 2017
- 1,777
- 6,791
- 136
Rocket Lake and Zen 3 were very close in IPC.Hold on, you're saying that Zen 5 will outperform ARL by a wider margin than Zen 3 outperformed RKL?
Just from the memory bandwidth advantages alone it should be more competitive than that. ARL will run DDR5-6400 JEDEC and should implement DDR5 CKD (client clock driver).
He didn't mean It as you think. I will try to explain It to you.No, he actually meant just 1 core. Did you not read his response?
So no reasoning of the type you mentioned. If he actually means MT performance is important too after all, he should say that.
Core count is also important for MT, but It's limited by the number of threads used by soft.And if MT performance is important, then core count matters as well. A lot. And then ARL-S will give Zen5 some real competition if Zen5 is only 16C, while ARL-S is 8P+32E. But with no official sources confirming any of this, it's all speculation at this point.
I was the one that asked that question initially and I specifically said I wouldn't hold him to it. He didn't just throw out that number out of the blue or try to claim it was an authoritative leak.Just a PSA anyone that claims to know what Zen 5 pricing will be does not know what they are talking about. AMD does not decide on pricing until just before launch. Pricing is set based on existing competitor pricing, channel availability, etc.
I have no idea what the final price for the 16 core (non-v-cache part) part will be either, but I bet it will be < $999…
They already did, client rev is up QoQ for both x86 vendors.Market conditions will need to improve
The perf is good enough to be a volume driver in itself.Unless they just don't care about volume and want to move the peg.
They already did, client rev is up QoQ for both x86 vendors.
The perf is good enough to be a volume driver in itself.
Only mobile can be a bit of an issue since Intel is very keen about flooding the market with cheapo RPL 282 parts.
Yes!Can RPL still be used with DDR4 in notebook space?
AMD never actually made a specific claim about IPC improvement. It’s just the usual leakers making these statements.I feel expecting >30% IPC (per clock) is over optimistic. It may get that in selected micro benchmarks, or games, but I doubt it will get pure IPC increase of >30% compared to Zen4. Getting that much of IPC from existing code is very difficult. We may get higher IPC with new changes proposed by Intel to increase the register count. But that will be in the future and application has to be re-compiled for that.
End of the day same story will repeat, Bad AMD, they promised over 30% IPC and what we got is 15-20%. AMD cheats and lies... Not worth the sand...
Also having 4 generations of 16 core max is setting themselves for disaster regardless of single core performance.
That is exactly my point, it is always someone makes outlandish claims about AMD performance then come back and complain AMD lies and cheat.AMD never actually made a specific claim about IPC improvement. It’s just the usual leakers making these statements.
I feel expecting >30% IPC (per clock) is over optimistic. It may get that in selected micro benchmarks, or games, but I doubt it will get pure IPC increase of >30% compared to Zen4. Getting that much of IPC from existing code is very difficult. We may get higher IPC with new changes proposed by Intel to increase the register count. But that will be in the future and application has to be re-compiled for that.
End of the day same story will repeat, Bad AMD, they promised over 30% IPC and what we got is 15-20%. AMD cheats and lies... Not worth the sand...
Also having 4 generations of 16 core max is setting themselves for disaster regardless of single core performance.
Fwiw, this is what Ian got for his DT Zen 3 review:AMD never actually made a specific claim about IPC improvement. It’s just the usual leakers making these statements.
I imagine most of it originates from a Specint 2017 benchmark of Turin. I don’t think this lone Turin benchmark is enough to extrapolate a 30%+ IPC uplift and AMD world domination but that’s the usual AMD hype train. Genoa benchmarks also showed massive gains in Specint (20%+) and the IPC gains ended up at 13%. Milan Specint (1-copy) had 30% gains and the client products had a 19% IPC uplift.
Here’s Milan (Epyc 75F3) showing a 30% improvement over Rome (Epyc 7742).
View attachment 84946
This particular chart appears to take into account clock speed, which is why it comes out to ~15%. Zen 3 also had a slight frequency bump over Zen 2 which got it to that overall 19% uplift.Fwiw, this is what Ian got for his DT Zen 3 review:
View attachment 84947
About a 19% gain, which is inline with the advertised IPC uplift.
Will we see Zen 5's SPEC scores match up with what AMD advertises? We'll just have to wait until the announcement to find out.
16 general purpose registers are not enough. Atleast I personally found it limiting. The issue here is not whether 16 regs are enough or not. But to do wider CPU architecture you need more registers so CPU can run more instructions in parallel. Otherwise, wider architecture will go unused most of the time. Register renaming have only limited use when you have to constantly save and reload values to register. Basically 16 registers is sort of bottleneck for doing wider design.AMD64 / x86-64 already increased the number of registers. So that is going to start reaching diminishing returns.
15% for SPECfp, 19% for SPECint.This particular chart appears to take into account clock speed, which is why it comes out to ~15%. Zen 3 also had a slight frequency bump over Zen 2 which got it to that overall 19% uplift.
Honestly, I'm not sure why everyone is giving so much attention to this forum leaker. Besides the fact that the CPU forum has had something like a 0% success rate on previous forum leakers, the $1000 claim for 16 core Z5 is totally a red flag. Firstly because of how unlikely it sounds, and secondly because of the sheer amount of confidence he's projecting with this claim. Pricing is the most flexible, most fluid, most likely to be changed before launch. A real industry insider would know this and wouldn't harp on something that's so likely to leave egg on his face. At most he might say to expect a large price increase.
Well, there are annotated die shots around for the sIOD showing 12 ports .That is what Genoa uses in the Top End SKUs.Interesting, in that case maybe AMD has a 192-core version waiting in the wings. But (hate to be this guy) do you have a source on the 8 ports?
Clocks are also decided somewhat late in the game, but earlier than pricing.My thought exactly. Price is the only part of the product that can easily be changed willy-nilly up to the launch. It's the most fluid part of the product.
Not to the level it was in 2020 (overall). Plus AMD Osbourned themselves with Zen4 . . . it'll be funny if they do it again.They already did, client rev is up QoQ for both x86 vendors.
How did they Osborne themselves with Zen 4?Not to the level it was in 2020 (overall). Plus AMD Osbourned themselves with Zen4 . . . it'll be funny if they do it again.
Lets place the blame where it belongs though, its not randoms on forums (or even twitter) that cause this, its the people who have gotten low level fame (undeserved) from making stuff up before, make money off it, and are unfortunately referenced by the tech media.That is exactly my point, it is always someone makes outlandish claims about AMD performance then come back and complain AMD lies and cheat.