Low Power, FinFET and Clock Gating

When AMD launched Carrizo and Bristol Ridge for notebooks, one of the big stories was how AMD had implemented a number of techniques to improve power consumption and subsequently increase efficiency. A number of those lessons have come through with Zen, as well as a few new aspects in play due to the lithography.

First up is the FinFET effect. Regular readers of AnandTech and those that follow the industry will already be bored to death with FinFET, but the design allows for a lower power version of a transistor at a given frequency. Now of course everyone using FinFET can have a different implementation which gives specific power/performance characteristics, but Zen on the 14nm FinFET process at Global Foundries is already a known quantity with AMD’s Polaris GPUs which are built similarly. The combination of FinFET with the fact that AMD confirmed that they will be using the density-optimised version of 14nm FinFET (which will allow for smaller die sizes and more reasonable efficiency points) also contributes to a shift of either higher performance at the same power or the same performance at lower power.

AMD stated in the brief that power consumption and efficiency was constantly drilled into the engineers, and as explained in previous briefings, there ends up being a tradeoff between performance and efficiency about what can be done for a number of elements of the core (e.g. 1% performance might cost 2% efficiency). For Zen, the micro-op cache will save power by not having to go further out to get instruction data, improved prefetch and a couple of other features such as move elimination will also reduce the work, but AMD also states that cores will be aggressively clock gated to improve efficiency.

We saw with AMD’s 7th Gen APUs that power gating was also a target with that design, especially when remaining at the best efficiency point (given specific performance) is usually the best policy. The way the diagram above is laid out would seem to suggest that different parts of the core could independently be clock gated depending on use (e.g. decode vs FP ports), although we were not able to confirm if this is the case. It also relies on having very quick (1-2 cycle) clock gating implementations, and note that clock gating is different to power-gating, which is harder to implement.

Deciphering the New Cache Hierarchy: L1, 512 KB L2, 8 or 16 MB L3 Simultaneous Multi-Threading, Time Frame
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  • pikunsia - Friday, August 19, 2016 - link

    Yeah, but let's recall also Intel used AMD64 architecture (since the Opterons).
  • atomsymbol - Monday, August 22, 2016 - link

    It is true there's no significant difference between ZEN and Skylake.
  • bobhumplick - Thursday, August 30, 2018 - link

    of course they copied intel. its just a dual socket system shrunk to fit on a single die. and thats exactlyw hat they should have done. its exactly what intel should have done when they made the p4. they should have copied themselves. you dont try to push a new arch like p4 or fx when another desing is so dominate. you have to make the cpu fit the software not the other way around. also intel learned that lesson again with epyc (well i guess at the same time as the p4 thing). you have to have something that will run todays software, if you can add functionality to become the new standard in the future then great but it must fit todays software first and if the compeitions cpu fits todays software better then they will set the trends not you
  • Michael Bay - Thursday, August 18, 2016 - link

    WHEN
  • Cygni - Thursday, August 18, 2016 - link

    READ
  • Michael Bay - Friday, August 19, 2016 - link

    I WANT DATES
  • TheinsanegamerN - Friday, August 19, 2016 - link

    BETTER LOSE WEIGHT
  • Michael Bay - Saturday, August 20, 2016 - link

    YOU GOT ME
  • Kaboose - Thursday, August 18, 2016 - link

    "It’s worth nothing that AMD said"
    3rd to last paragraph on the final page, should probably read
    "it's worth NOTING that AMD said".
  • Ian Cutress - Thursday, August 18, 2016 - link

    Ha! That's 2am brain drain for you. Fixed :)

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