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

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Josh128

Golden Member
Oct 14, 2022
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Zen 5, being a different design, would obviously make some difference.
It would, for sure, but 4nm is inherent to Zen 5 as we know it already. If its got +16%IPC over Zen 4 at iso clocks, then the only thing that would boost it to +30% over Zen 4 that would be attributable to process node would have to be clock speed. I really dont know, maybe all core clocks on 64 core Zen 5 are significantly higher than 64 core Zen 4. Thats why I posed the question.

On desktop, maybe it all cores +100 or +200 MHz faster, so if its the same percentage for HEDT, thats not enough to make up for the difference.
 

StefanR5R

Elite Member
Dec 10, 2016
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Apropos...
Desktop and server do not share the CCD, just the design itself.
very very different xtor-level optimizations.
...AMD's f_max specifications:
5.0 GHz for Turin (9575F, 9175F),
5.4 GHz for Shimada Peak (any one of them),
5.7 GHz for Granite Ridge (9950X, and 9950X3D vanilla CCD).

I wonder which of the CCD flavors they put into Shimada Peak.

Edit: Also, are the CCDs fed by GMI-wide? It'd work up to 64 cores.
 
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adroc_thurston

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Jul 2, 2023
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As the third major enhancement of TSMC’s 5nm family, N4P will deliver an 11% performance boost over the original N5 technology and a 6% boost over N4
So TSMC is lying?
numbers in a vacuum that have no relation to modern DTCO'd to hell designs
 

Mopetar

Diamond Member
Jan 31, 2011
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Some of it could be tweaks to the process over the past year. I don't think that would explain the entire difference, but it has been a little over 12 months since Zen 5 launched and nodes do mature over time.
 

fastandfurious6

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Jun 1, 2024
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a week ago I thought about the future is small devices (just APU and ports, maybe handheld form with small screen and buttons) and then monitor/peripherals being in very portable form i.e. foldable OLED

yesterday I saw this lenovo "thinkbook" with rollable OLED transforms from 14'' to 17'' screen lmao https://www.notebookcheck.net/Think...-becomes-available-to-purchase.1073152.0.html

killer feature, will likely become norm if easy/cheap to implement, here in action

lenovo really at forefront in mobile, no other company comes close
 
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511

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Jul 12, 2024
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I agree with Adroc here. Do we have any evidence Zen 5 is clocking 11% faster at the same power draws as Zen 4? Because thats what this would imply.
Not necessarily but again this is what the half node provides even that is for ARM is it impossible for AMD to get few% from the node?
 

gdansk

Diamond Member
Feb 8, 2011
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Not necessarily but again this is what the half node provides even that is for ARM is it impossible for AMD to get few% from the node?
The process isn't explaining anything. Because Zen 5 has appeared elsewhere and has not faired this well compared to its Zen 4 predecessor when at the same power level.
I suspect membw is contributing heavily here as Phoronix includes a good number of AVX-512 workloads many of which enjoy membw.
 
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gdansk

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Feb 8, 2011
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That Strix Halo vs. 9950X3D comparison also shows some weirdly great multicore wins for the Halo chip and I think membw is the only explanation.
Possibly, who knows.
Here's a comparison to my stock 9950X3D at least running the same OS since the Linux builds of GB consistently put up better numbers.
"HTML5 Browser" subtest being bandwidth limited I would not have expected
 

poke01

Diamond Member
Mar 8, 2022
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Possibly, who knows.
Here's a comparison to my stock 9950X3D at least running the same OS since the Linux builds of GB consistently put up better numbers.
"HTML5 Browser" subtest being bandwidth limited I would not have expected
A SoC with 14 core 512GB/s has no effect on the score vs a 14 core 276GB/s SoC.

I guess past a certain point more bandwidth in this subtest is useless
 
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ToTTenTranz

Senior member
Feb 4, 2021
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a week ago I thought about the future is small devices (just APU and ports, maybe handheld form with small screen and buttons) and then monitor/peripherals being in very portable form i.e. foldable OLED

yesterday I saw this lenovo "thinkbook" with rollable OLED transforms from 14'' to 17'' screen lmao https://www.notebookcheck.net/Think...-becomes-available-to-purchase.1073152.0.html

killer feature, will likely become norm if easy/cheap to implement, here in action

lenovo really at forefront in mobile, no other company comes close

Future ia EMG bracelets that detect fine finger and wrist movements, being used to interface with AR glasses.



That Strix Halo vs. 9950X3D comparison also shows some weirdly great multicore wins for the Halo chip and I think membw is the only explanation.
STX Halo has a faster and more expensive inter-CCD connect.
 
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yuri69

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Jul 16, 2013
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His geomean results put 9980X as +30% over 7980X. Very interesting as it should have similar clocks as the 7980X. This holds true for 9970X vs 7970X as well (+28%). Whats accounting for the additional +14% overall perf over the claimed +16% IPC?
* There is a lot of throughput oriented benchmarks in that suite - 4800 vs 6400 memory
* There might be more AI/HPC benchmarks than "in the average mix" - full AVX-512 shines there
* More advanced DVFS algos on Zen 5?
* More mature platform/firemware/BIOS?
 
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DrMrLordX

Lifer
Apr 27, 2000
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Yes really. Strix Halo is an experiment for AMD, they're testing the waters. The same applies to handheld makers, they're tempted by the capabilities of the product and willing to experiment despite it's obvious drawbacks.

The only real drawback is that it's way outside of the power range for handhelds. But hey whatever, maybe Asia has a market for these things. More sales for AMD isn't a bad thing.

Moreover, Strix Halo is such a known quantity that up until a few days ago you didn't even know it had a single CCD SKU.
Like my knowledge about a single-CCD 380/385 matters. I could be dead in a ditch tomorrow and it wouldn't make this any more or less interesting. Has anyone seriously not benchmarked the 380 or 385? We already know what they can do, don't we?

A real experiment would be someone going to AMD's semi-custom division and hacking together a part that would actually target handhelds. Something that would hopefully wind up being better than a Z2 Extreme.
 

MS_AT

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Jul 15, 2024
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His geomean results put 9980X as +30% over 7980X. Very interesting as it should have similar clocks as the 7980X. This holds true for 9970X vs 7970X as well (+28%). Whats accounting for the additional +14% overall perf over the claimed +16% IPC?
Sustained clocks should be higher. Just compare on Epyc https://www.amd.com/en/products/pro...ation-9004-and-8004-series/amd-epyc-9554.html vs https://www.amd.com/en/products/processors/server/epyc/9005-series/amd-epyc-9555.html (all core boost speed, this is not specified for threadripper parts) this is also what they were talking about around Zen5 release. That Zen5 parts don't boost higher but are able to hold higher clocks under heavier loads compared to Zen4. I mean it's few hundred MHz but if you add IPC increase and memBW increase it will all add up.