Question Zen 6 Speculation Thread

Page 300 - Seeking answers? Join the AnandTech community: where nearly half-a-million members share solutions and discuss the latest tech.

Josh128

Golden Member
Oct 14, 2022
1,450
2,193
106
On SPEC anyone remember when Zenver3 was slower than Zenver5 🤣🤣
Shoot, I remember when Zenver1 was slower than Zenver3!

Re: SPECintRate 2017 as being a good benchmark for the average users desktop PC, what an ridiculous notion. Lets see, I can download and run 5 versions of Cinebench, who knows how many versions of Geekbench, Blender, VRay, and multiple other benchmarks before I can even get a working executable of sir2017, not to mention I have to pay for it. Even ChipsNCheese says its challenging to run and literallly takes hours to run after you've compiled it, and results vary depending on how you compile it, lol.

1763211916330.png



1763212186507.png
 

Nothingness

Diamond Member
Jul 3, 2013
3,328
2,403
136
Even ChipsNCheese says its challenging to run and literallly takes hours to run after you've compiled it, and results vary depending on how you compile it, lol.
Yeah SPEC is definitely not only a CPU benchmark: it's both a compiler and CPU benchmark (and to a lesser extent, an OS/lib benchmark).

The CPU design companies I know run SPECrate with 1 CPU; it's much faster than SPECspeed (and less prone to compiler tricks to autoparellize). And even beyond that, CPU companies tend to stick to the same compiler and same set of flags for long: all they're interested in is how much faster their new uarch is compared to the previous ones, and you can only do that for binaries that don't change for years.

SPEC is definitely a benchmark for pros, not for the average user.
 
  • Like
Reactions: Thunder 57

Abwx

Lifer
Apr 2, 2011
11,898
4,883
136
Shoot, I remember when Zenver1 was slower than Zenver3!

Re: SPECintRate 2017 as being a good benchmark for the average users desktop PC, what an ridiculous notion. Lets see, I can download and run 5 versions of Cinebench, who knows how many versions of Geekbench, Blender, VRay, and multiple other benchmarks before I can even get a working executable of sir2017, not to mention I have to pay for it. Even ChipsNCheese says its challenging to run and literallly takes hours to run after you've compiled it, and results vary depending on how you compile it, lol.

Cinebench is a FP bench, there s nothing further from usual consumers apps than CB, 7Zip is a much better metric since it s INT.

Beside CB R2X and 2024 are the only rendering tests where Intel has a ST advantage, in Blender, Corona, Povray and VRay AMD has better IPC be it ST or MT, so even for FP it s a mediocre bench to compare AMD to Intel since it s at odd with all other such tests.
 
  • Like
Reactions: 511

Markfw

Moderator Emeritus, Elite Member
May 16, 2002
27,316
16,144
136
Cinebench is a FP bench, there s nothing further from usual consumers apps than CB, 7Zip is a much better metric since it s INT.

Beside CB R2X and 2024 are the only rendering tests where Intel has a ST advantage, in Blender, Corona, Povray and VRay AMD has better IPC be it ST or MT, so even for FP it s a mediocre bench to compare AMD to Intel since it s at odd with all other such tests.
I just usage phoronix tests, sometimes chips-and-cheese. They usage a wide variety of tests and are fair, and good summaries.
 

OneEng2

Senior member
Sep 19, 2022
921
1,152
106
Guys, the cadence is always 4Q’s.
I think the cadence between generations will match the cadence of process improvements.

A14 without BSPDN would likely be a cadence for Zen 6-Zen7 of about 2 years. If AMD decides they need BSPDN (and they might well decide this for DC), then it might be more like 2.5-3 years.

Zen 5 (mobile) was released in July 2024. I suspect we will not see Zen 6 until late 2026 ... so likely > 2 years.
 

luro

Member
Dec 11, 2022
80
116
76
I think the cadence between generations will match the cadence of process improvements.

A14 without BSPDN would likely be a cadence for Zen 6-Zen7 of about 2 years. If AMD decides they need BSPDN (and they might well decide this for DC), then it might be more like 2.5-3 years.

Zen 5 (mobile) was released in July 2024. I suspect we will not see Zen 6 until late 2026 ... so likely > 2 years.
Zen 6 mobile is CES afaik
 

SmokSmog

Member
Oct 2, 2020
85
203
106
33% more cores = 70% better MT performance means that 27.5% contains clock gain and IPC.

My guess:
10% IPC 16% clock bump or 12% IPC and 14% clock bump

Desktop Zen6:
1.5*1.1*1.16= 1.914

So >90% gain in multi-core over 9950X.
 

yuri69

Senior member
Jul 16, 2013
688
1,227
136
33% more cores = 70% better MT performance means that 27.5% contains clock gain and IPC.

My guess:
10% IPC 16% clock bump or 12% IPC and 14% clock bump

Desktop Zen6:
1.5*1.1*1.16= 1.914

So >90% gain in multi-core over 9950X.
We learned a lesson with Zen 5 - do not estimate any other segments based on a server performance figure.

Compared to desktop:
* Server got a completely different IOD (different characteristics)
* Server is gonna get more memory channels
* Server workloads behave differently (memory b/w, TDP limitation)
* Server is gonna get the TDP headroom expanded (we don't know whether desktop gets that too)
 

reaperrr3

Member
May 31, 2024
142
419
96
We learned a lesson with Zen 5 - do not estimate any other segments based on a server performance figure.

Compared to desktop:
* Server got a completely different IOD (different characteristics)
* Server is gonna get more memory channels
* Server workloads behave differently (memory b/w, TDP limitation)
* Server is gonna get the TDP headroom expanded (we don't know whether desktop gets that too)
Maybe, but:
  • Zen5 used the same IOD as Zen4, Zen6 gets a new one (better IF and better mem controller are safe bets)
  • Zen5 used only a slightly improved node vs. Zen4 (Zen6 uses a much faster node)
  • Zen5 had no L2/L3/CCX improvements worth mentioning (Zen2 doubled L3/CCX, Zen3 doubled CCX, Zen4 doubled L2), while desktop Zen6 increases L3 per CCD/CCX.
    Last time the CCX/max. amount of accessible L3 per core/thread grew in desktop (Zen3), games got an above-average IPC benefit out of it.
  • Zen5 invested a lot of the added transistors into full-rate AVX512 with doubled FP_PRF, while most desktop workloads are rather Integer-bound and INT_PRF only grew by a measly 16 entries from 224 to 240, still smaller than Sunny Cove's 280 (Ice Lake from 2019) and one major bottleneck now, according to something adroc mentioned before.
    So a pretty low-hanging fruit to pick with Zen6 (anything less than growing IntPRF to at least 288 would be disappointing; best-case would be 336, matching int PRF/ALU ratio of Zen4).
Anyway, all the biggest deals of Zen6 - faster memory support, bigger CCD/CCX, (presumably) stronger INT focus, and of course much higher turbo clocks - are good for gaming perf, which is what desktop is largely about.
For desktop, I expect Zen6 to be a bigger absolute upgrade over Zen5 than Zen4 was over Zen3, because of the reasons above.
 

BorisTheBlade82

Senior member
May 1, 2020
721
1,145
136
Maybe, but:
  • Zen5 used the same IOD as Zen4, Zen6 gets a new one (better IF and better mem controller are safe bets)
  • Zen5 used only a slightly improved node vs. Zen4 (Zen6 uses a much faster node)
  • Zen5 had no L2/L3/CCX improvements worth mentioning (Zen2 doubled L3/CCX, Zen3 doubled CCX, Zen4 doubled L2), while desktop Zen6 increases L3 per CCD/CCX.
    Last time the CCX/max. amount of accessible L3 per core/thread grew in desktop (Zen3), games got an above-average IPC benefit out of it.
  • Zen5 invested a lot of the added transistors into full-rate AVX512 with doubled FP_PRF, while most desktop workloads are rather Integer-bound and INT_PRF only grew by a measly 16 entries from 224 to 240, still smaller than Sunny Cove's 280 (Ice Lake from 2019) and one major bottleneck now, according to something adroc mentioned before.
    So a pretty low-hanging fruit to pick with Zen6 (anything less than growing IntPRF to at least 288 would be disappointing; best-case would be 336, matching int PRF/ALU ratio of Zen4).
Anyway, all the biggest deals of Zen6 - faster memory support, bigger CCD/CCX, (presumably) stronger INT focus, and of course much higher turbo clocks - are good for gaming perf, which is what desktop is largely about.
For desktop, I expect Zen6 to be a bigger absolute upgrade over Zen5 than Zen4 was over Zen3, because of the reasons above.
While I agree with your points, a bigger increase than Zen3 to 4 would be a very positive surprise IMHO. While back at the time most people were a bit disappointed of the IPC gains, together with the significant clock gains it was no slouch at all - more the biggest increase in the whole Zen era until now wrt to ST performance.