Single Core Integer Performance With SPEC CPU2006

In past server reviews, I used LZMA (7-zip) compression and decompression to evaluate single threaded performance. But I was well aware that while it was a decent integer test, it also gave a very myopic view in the process. After noticing that my colleagues used SPEC CPU2006, and after discussing the matter with several people, I realized that running SPEC CPU2006 was a much better way to evaluate single core performance. Even though SPEC CPU2006 is more HPC and workstation oriented, it contains a good variety of integer workloads.

I also wanted to keep the settings as "normal" as possible. So I used:

  • 64 bit gcc : most used compiler on linux, good all round compiler that does not try to "break" benchmarks (libquantum...)
  • gcc version 4.8.4: 4.8.x has been around for a long time, very mature version
  • -O2 -fno-strict-aliasing: standard compiler settings that many developers use
  • Run 2 copies and bind them to the first core

The ultimate objective is to measure performance in non-"aggressively optimized" applications where for some reason - as is frequently the case - a "multi thread unfriendly" task keeps us waiting. As we want to be able to compare these numbers to other architectures such as the IBM POWER 8, we decided to use all threads available on a single core. In case of Intel, this means one physical and two simultaneous threads running on top of it.

We included the Opteron 6376 for nostalgic reasons. We are showing the results of 2 threads running on top of one module with 2 "integer cores".

Subtest Xeon E5-2690 Opteron 6376 Xeon E5-2697v2 Xeon E5-2667 v3 Xeon E5-2699 v3 Xeon E5-2699 v4
400.perlbench 41.1 29.3 37.6 42.6 39.9 36.6
401.bzip2 33.4 24.1 30.1 33.1 29.9 25.3
403.gcc 40.2 26.7 38.9 42.4 36.4 33.3
429.mcf 45.1 31.7 46.8 46.4 41.6 43.9
445.gobmk 36.4 25.5 33.2 34.9 31.7 27.7
456.hmmer 30.4 26.1 27.6 31 27.1 28.4
458.sjeng 35.2 24.7 32.8 35.2 30.5 28.3
462.libquantum 74.9 39.9 79.3 84.4 62.2 67.3
464.h264ref 51.7 34.2 48.1 52.1 45.2 40.7
471.omnetpp 24.5 25.3 26.8 29.4 26.6 29.9
473.astar 28.2 20.7 26.1 27.9 24 23.6
483.xalancbmk 41.5 28.2 41.4 48.2 42.4 41.8

Unless you are used to seeing these numbers, this does not tell you too much. As Sandy Bridge EP (Xeon E5 v1) is about 4 years old, the servers based upon this CPU are going to get replaced by newer ones. So Sandy Bridge is our reference, and Sandy Bridge performance is considered to be 100%.

Subtest Application type Xeon E5-2690 Opteron 6376 Xeon E5-2697v2 Xeon E5-2667 v3 Xeon E5-2699 v3 Xeon E5-2699 v4
400.perlbench Spam filter 100% 71% 91% 104% 97% 89%
401.bzip2 Compression 100% 72% 90% 99% 90% 76%
403.gcc Compiling 100% 66% 97% 105% 91% 83%
429.mcf Vehicle scheduling 100% 70% 104% 103% 92% 97%
445.gobmk Game AI 100% 70% 91% 96% 87% 76%
456.hmmer Protein seq. analyses 100% 86% 91% 102% 89% 93%
458.sjeng Chess 100% 70% 93% 100% 87% 80%
462.libquantum Quantum sim 100% 53% 106% 113% 83% 90%
464.h264ref Video encoding 100% 66% 93% 101% 87% 79%
471.omnetpp Network sim 100% 103% 109% 120% 110% 122%
473.astar Pathfinding 100% 73% 93% 99% 85% 84%
483.xalancbmk XML processing 100% 68% 100% 116% 102% 101%

Many smart people have spent weeks - if not months - on SPEC CPU2006 analysis, so we will not pretend we can offer you a complete picture in a few days. If you want a detailed analysis of compilers and CPU 2006, I recommend the very detailed article of SPEC CPU 2006 meister Andreas Stiller in the February issue of C'T (German computer magazine). 

We need much more profiling data than we could gather in the past weeks. But for what we can do, we'll start with the most important parameter: clockspeed.

One of the most important things to realize is that - especially with badly threaded workloads - these massive multi-core CPUs almost never work at their advertised clockspeed.

  • The Xeon E5-2690 can run at 3.3 GHz with all cores busy, and is capable of boosting up to 3.8 GHz
  • The Xeon E5-2697 v2 can run at 3 GHz with all cores busy, and is capable of boosting up to 3.5 GHz
  • The Xeon E5-2699 v3 can run at 2.8 GHz with all cores busy, and is capable of boosting up to 3.6 GHz
  • The Xeon E5-2667 v3 3.2 GHz is a specialized high frequency model. It can run at 3.4 GHz with all cores busy, and is capable of boosting up to 3.6 GHz
  • The Xeon E5-2699 v4 can run at 2.8 GHz with all cores busy, and is capable of boosting up to 3.6 GHz

So that already explains a lot. In contrast to the many benchmark applications, SPEC CPU2006 runs for a long time (5 to 15 minutes per test), and our first impression is that the HCC parts are not able to keep all of their cores at their maximum turbo boost. Otherwise there is no reason why a Xeon E5-2699 v3 or v4 would perform worse than a Xeon E5-2667 v3: both can run at 3.6 GHz when one core is active.

The low IPC, memory intensive network simulator omnetppp seems to be the only test that runs significantly better on the newer cores (Haswell, Broadwell) compared to Sandy Bridge. That also seems to be the only benchmark where the high core count chips (E5-2699 v4, E5-2699 v3) continue to outperform Sandy Bridge. We could pinpoint the reason by testing with different memory speeds and channels. The E5-2699 v4 can offer the highest performance thanks to the larger L3-cache (55 MB) and the higher DIMM speed (DDR4-2400) compared to Sandy Bridge (20 MB, DDR3-1600). Otherwise when we keep the clockspeed more or less constant, by looking at the Xeon E5-2667v3 and the Xeon E5-2690, we get a 1-5% speed difference, and only the memory intensive subtests (omnetpp, Libquantum) and xalancbmk (low IPC, branch intensive) show higher improvements.

Once we test both top SKUs with "-Ofast" (a more aggressive compiler setting), the results change quite a bit:.

Subtest Application type Xeon E5-2699 v4 vs Xeon E5-2690 (-Ofast) Xeon E5-2699 v4 vs Xeon E5-2690 (-O2)
400.perlbench Spam filter 111% 89%
401.bzip2 Compression 94% 76%
403.gcc Compiling 95% 83%
429.mcf Vehicle scheduling 114% 97%
445.gobmk Game AI 90% 76%
456.hmmer Protein seq. analyses 106% 93%
458.sjeng Chess 93% 80%
462.libquantum Quantum sim 101% 90%
464.h264ref Video encoding 89% 79%
471.omnetpp Network sim 132% 122%
473.astar Pathfinding 98% 84%
483.xalancbmk XML processing 105% 101%

Switching from -O2 to -Ofast improves Broadwell-EP's absolute performance by over 19%. Meanwhile the relative performance advantage versus the Xeon E5-2690 averages 3%. As a result, the clockspeed disadvantage of the latest Xeon is negated by the increase in IPC. Clearly the latest generation of Xeons benefit more from aggressive optimizations than the previous ones. That is unsurprising of course, but it is interesting that the newest Xeons need more optimization to "hold the line" in single core performance.

So far we can conclude that if you were to upgrade from a Xeon E5-2xxx v1 to a similar v4 model, your single threaded integer code will not run faster without recompiling and optimizing. The process improvements have been used mostly to add more cores in the same power envelope, while at same time Intel also traded a few speed bins in to add even more cores in the top models. As a result single core integer performance basically holds the line, nothing more. The only exception are memory intensive applications who benefit from every growing L3-cache and the faster DRAM technology.

Benchmark Configuration and Methodology Memory Subsystem
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  • Kevin G - Thursday, March 31, 2016 - link

    Much like how Apple skipped Haswell-EP, they also skipped a generation of cards from AMD and nVidia. So even if Apple doesn't wait for new GPUs, their is certainly an update on the GPU side.

    The more interesting possibility would be if Apple were to go with Xeon D in the Mac Pro instead of Broadwell-EP. Apple would need a big PLX chip considering the number of lanes they's want to use but it is possible.
  • bill.rookard - Thursday, March 31, 2016 - link

    Another issue is that they're not under any pressure from any competition to really innovate. I don't even remember the last time I read anything about Opteron servers... let alone something about any NEW Opterons.
  • ComputerGuy2006 - Thursday, March 31, 2016 - link

    A sign of things to come for Broadwell-e?

    Seems like a tricky situation. Because skylake-e will come with a new platform in 2017, while broadwell-e isn't the fastest IPC and there are crazy rumors it will might cost $1500 (lol Intel). We also have Zen later this year that might give good performance with good cost/perf ratio.
  • extide - Thursday, March 31, 2016 - link

    Yeah so Intel only gives us the LCC part for the -E platform, so we will see the 10-core SKU as the top, It will either be $1000, or $1500 ... so yeah not sure how that will end up. Although there will be 8 and 6 core options that should be pretty affordable.

    Hopefully they do an 8 core part with 28 lanes for under $500, as THAT would be a great deal!
  • dragonsqrrl - Sunday, April 3, 2016 - link

    I'm hoping the 8 core SKU is around $600, the position the x930K traditionally occupies. What makes me a little worried is that there will be 4 SKUs instead of 3 this time (one 10 core, one 8 core, and two 6 core), and I'm not sure there's enough room under the $600 price point for two 6 core processors.
  • jasonelmore - Thursday, March 31, 2016 - link

    Can it run Star Citizen?
  • theduckofdeath - Thursday, March 31, 2016 - link

    A question we'll never get an answer to? :D
  • JohanAnandtech - Friday, April 1, 2016 - link

    It probably runs mostly on Xeons. Well, the back end that is :-)
  • extide - Thursday, March 31, 2016 - link

    BOOM, 454mm^2 on the worlds best process. The "other" 14/16nm processes use bigger geometry than Intel's 14nm process.

    Now we just need those other guys to catch up so we can see 450+mm GPU's!
  • Kevin G - Thursday, March 31, 2016 - link

    Intel still has plenty of room to increase die size. The largest chip they've produced was the Tukwila Itanium 2 at 699 mm^2. Granted that was a 65 nm design but Haswell-EX is a juggarnaught at 662 mm^2 on Intel's more recent 22 nm process. Seems reasonable that SkyLake-EX could go to 32 cores as Intel has >200 mm^2 of rectal limit left.

    As for GPU's, they're also huge. nVidia's GM200 is 601 mm^2 and AMD's Fiji is 'only' 596 mm^2 both on 28 nm process. TSMC's 20 nm process was skipped so even using the looser 16 nm FinFET, GPU's will see a significant shrink compared to the those high end chips.

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