Frequency Ramp, Latency and Power

Frequency Ramp

One of the key items of a modern processor is its ability to go from an idle state up to a peak turbo state. For consumer workloads this is important for the responsiveness of a system, such as opening a program or interacting with a web page, but for the enterprise market it ends up being more relevant when each core can control its turbo, and we get situations with either multi-user instances or database accesses. For these systems, obviously saving power helps with the total cost of ownership, but being able to offer a low latency transaction in that system is often a key selling point.

For our 7F52 system, we measured a jump up to peak frequency within 16.2 milliseconds, which links in really well with the other AMD systems we have tested recently.

In a consumer system, normally we would point out that 16 milliseconds is the equivalent to a single frame on a 60 Hz display, although for enterprise it means that any transaction normally done within 16 milliseconds on the system is a very light workload that might not even kick up the turbo at all.

Cache Latency

As we’ve discussed in the past, the key element about Cache Latency on the AMD EPYC systems is the L3 cache – the way these cores are designed, with the quad-core core complexes, means that the only L3 each core can access is that within its own CCX. That means for every EPYC CPU, whether there is four cores per CCX enabled, or if there is only one core per CCX enabled, it only has access to 16 MB of L3. The fact that there is 256 MB across the whole chip is just a function of repeating units. As a result, we can get a cache latency graph of the following:

This structure mirrors up with what we’ve seen in AMD CPUs in the past. What we get here for the 7F52 is:

  • 1.0 nanoseconds for L1 (4 clks) up to 32 KB
  • 3.3 nanoseconds for L2 (13 clks) up to 256 KB,
  • 4.8-5.6 nanoseconds (19-21 clks) at 256-512 KB (Accesses starting to miss the L1 TLB here)
  • 12-14 nanoseconds (48-51 clks) from 1 MB to 8 MB inside the first half the CCX L3
  • Up to 37 nanoseconds (60-143 clks) at 8-16 MB for the rest of the L3 
  • ~150 nanoseconds (580-600+ clks) from 16 MB+ moving into DRAM

Compared to one of our more recent tests, Ryzen Mobile, we see the bigger L3 cache structure but also going beyond the L3 into DRAM, due to the hop to the IO die and then out to the main memory there’s a sizeable increase in latency in accessing main memory. It means that for those 600 or so cycles, the core needs to be active doing other things. As the L3 only takes L2 cache line rejects, this means there has to be a lot of reuse of L3 data, or cyclical math on the same data, to take advantage of this.

Core-to-Core Latency

By only having one core per CCX, the 7F52 takes away one segment of its latency structure.

  • Thread to Thread in same core: 8 nanoseconds
  • Core to Core in same CCX: doesn't apply
  • Core to Core in different CCX on same CPU in same quadrant: ~110 nanoseconds
  • Core to Core in different CCX on same CPU in different socket quadrant: 130-140 nanoseconds
  • Core to Core in a different socket: 250-270 nanosecons

 

All of the Power

Enterprise systems, unlike consumer systems, often have to adhere to a strict thermal envelope for the server and chassis designs that they go into. This means that, even in a world where there’s a lot of performance to be gained from having a fast turbo, the sustained power draw of these processors is mirrored in the TDP specifications of that processor. The chip may offer sustained boosts higher than this, which different server OEMs can design for and adjust the BIOS to implement, however the typical expected performance when ‘buying a server off the shelf’ is that if the chip has a specific TDP value, that will be the sustained turbo power draw. At that power, the system will try and implement the highest frequency it can, and depending on the microarchitecture of the power delivery, it might be able to move specific cores up and down in frequency if the workload is lighter on other cores.

By contrast, consumer grade CPUs will often boost well beyond the TDP label, to the second power limit as set in the BIOS. This limit is different depending on the motherboard, as manufacturers will design their motherboards beyond Intel specifications in order to supplement this.

For our power numbers, we take the CPU-only power draw at both idle and when running a heavy AVX2 load.

Load Power Per Socket

When we pile on the calories, all of our enterprise systems essentially go to TDPmax mode, with every system being just under the total TDP. The consumer processors give it a bit more oomph by contrast, being anywhere from 5-50% higher.

Idle Power Per Socket

In our high performance power plan, the AMD CPUs idle quite high compared to the Intel CPUs – both of our EPYC setups are at nearly 70 W per processor a piece, while the 32C Threadripper is in about that 45 W region. Intel seems to aggressively idle here.

AMD’s New EPYC 7F52 Reviewed SPEC2006 and SPEC2017 (Single Thread)
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  • The_Assimilator - Tuesday, April 14, 2020 - link

    F as in "press to pay respects for Intel".
  • DanNeely - Tuesday, April 14, 2020 - link

    Am I cynical enough to think AMD deliberately chose "F for fast" knowing that r/AMD would go for the obvious meme? Absolutely.
  • The_Assimilator - Tuesday, April 14, 2020 - link

    I don't post to any of the hardware manufacturer subreddits because the fanboyism is just too extreme. Call of Duty memes, though, are universal.
  • Ian Cutress - Tuesday, April 14, 2020 - link

    Hey everyone, thanks for reading the review. Apologies it's not got the best processors in for comparison, we're working on getting some of them in, and hopefully some more time to test them as it was a quick back-to-back with the Renoir review then this one. We're looking to expanding our testing for these types of processors, so any suggestions (and Cliff Notes-style guides) would be really helpful!
  • hehatemeXX - Tuesday, April 14, 2020 - link

    Just get rid of the consumer CPU's. Most folks in the category of decision makers will not equate these to consumer side. Also, would it be possible to add VM benchmarks? Like compute focused benchmarks.
  • DanNeely - Tuesday, April 14, 2020 - link

    The conventional server market won't; but there are niche segments like high frequency trading that go as crazy with high clocked consumer parts as enthusiasts do because in their world 1ms faster matters more than anything else (remember Intel's no warranty 5ghz all core chip auction last year, HFT was the target market). Those people will be interested in if or how AMDs huge caches on these chip could help them.
  • eek2121 - Tuesday, April 14, 2020 - link

    On the contrary, Zen parts are essentially tweaked server parts. If is entirely plausible to use consumer grade Zen CPUs in server hardware. I should know, a cloud gaming platform I am designing is doing it.
  • ballsystemlord - Tuesday, April 14, 2020 - link

    No, keep the consumer CPUs.
  • kobblestown - Wednesday, April 15, 2020 - link

    Like others, I also think the consumer CPUs should be kept. It's not only about purchasing decisions. Comparing against a wider gamut of CPU helps us to evaluate the impact that different architectural choices have on performance. Many people that frequent this site are not just about the numbers, but about the insights.
  • hehatemeXX - Thursday, April 16, 2020 - link

    No one in their right mind would evaluate a server CPU, designed for datacenters against a consumer CPU that will never see the light of day. WTB a real data center oriented website.. you consumers are just annoying when it comes to this stuff.

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