Final Words

HiSilicon’s Kirin 950 delivered impressive performance and efficiency, raising our expectations for its successor. And on paper at least, the Kirin 960 seems better in every way. It incorporates ARM’s latest IP, including A73 CPUs, the new Mali-G71 GPU with more cores, and a CCI-550 interconnect. It offers other improvements too, such as a new modem that supports higher LTE speeds and UFS 2.1 support. But when it comes to performance and efficiency, the Kirin 960 improves in some areas and regresses in others.

The Kirin 960’s A73 CPU cores are marginally faster than the 950’s A72 cores when handling integer workloads, with a more noticeable lead over Qualcomm’s Kryo and the older A57. When looking at floating-point IPC, the opposite is true, with Qualcomm’s Kryo and Kirin 950’s A72 cores posting better results than the 960’s A73.

Some of this performance regression may be explained by Kirin 960’s memory performance. Both latency and read bandwidth improve for its larger 64KB L1 cache, but write bandwidth is lower than Kirin 950. The 960’s L2 cache bandwidth is also lower for both read and write. Its latency to main memory improves by 25%, however, and bandwidth improves by an impressive 69%.

What’s really disappointing (and puzzling) about Kirin 960, though, is that its CPU efficiency is actually worse than the 950’s. ARM did a lot of work to reduce the A73’s power consumption relative to the A72, but the Kirin 960’s A73 cores see a substantial power increase over the 950’s A72 cores. The poor efficiency numbers are likely a combination of HiSilicon’s specific implementation and the switch to the 16FFC process. This was definitely an unexpected result considering the Mate 9’s excellent battery life. Fortunately, Huawei was able to save power elsewhere, such as the display, to make up for the SoC’s power increase, but it’s difficult not to think about how much better the battery life could have been.

Power consumption for Kirin 960’s GPU is even worse, with peak power numbers that are entirely inappropriate for a smartphone. Part of the problem is poor efficiency, again likely a combination of implementation and process, which is only made worse by an overly aggressive 1037MHz peak operating point that only serves to improve the spec sheet and benchmark results.

The Kirin 960 is difficult to categorize. It’s definitely not a clear upgrade over the 950, but it does just enough things right that we cannot dismiss it outright either. For example, its generally improved integer performance and lower system memory latency give it an advantage over the 950 in many real-world workloads. We cannot completely condemn its GPU either, because its sustained performance, at least in the Mate 9’s large aluminum chassis, is on par with or better than competing flagship phones, as is its battery life when gaming. Certainly the Mate 9 proves that Kirin 960 is a viable flagship SoC as long as Huawei puts in the effort to work around its flaws. But with a new generation of 10nm SoCs just around the corner, those flaws will only become more apparent.

GPU Power Consumption and Thermal Stability
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  • Meteor2 - Wednesday, March 15, 2017 - link

    Evidence?
  • Shadowmaster625 - Tuesday, March 14, 2017 - link

    You should use an older iphone for these graphs, not just to make the graphs look better, but also to help these android phones appear to not get murdered so badly.
  • fanofanand - Tuesday, March 14, 2017 - link

    I was really impressed with what I was seeing until that iPhone 7 reared it's ugly head, it certainly puts the ecosystem in perspective doesn't it.
  • joms_us - Tuesday, March 14, 2017 - link

    Doesn't matter, real-world tests show iPhones are pathetic in comparison. It is just fast in loading games and playing it at low-resolution bwahaha.
  • MrSpadge - Tuesday, March 14, 2017 - link

    Trolling troll is trolling.
  • joms_us - Tuesday, March 14, 2017 - link

    Butt-hurt iCrap fan...

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mcTAXsFHu5I
  • MrSpadge - Wednesday, March 15, 2017 - link

    Never bought or recommended any Apple device yet.
  • fanofanand - Wednesday, March 15, 2017 - link

    I've never even owned an Apple device in my life, but I am not delusional enough to think the Cyclone/Twister or whatever their current gen is named, doesn't mop the floor with all other mobile SOCs.
  • MrSpadge - Wednesday, March 15, 2017 - link

    +1
  • CrazyElf - Tuesday, March 14, 2017 - link

    I still cannot get over how much more potent the iPhone's SOC is compared to the rest of the Android phones.

    Why won't an Android SOC vendor try to match that awesome IPC?

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