CPU Office Tests

The office programs we use for benchmarking aren't specific programs per-se, but industry standard tests that hold weight with professionals. The goal of these tests is to use an array of software and techniques that a typical office user might encounter, such as video conferencing, document editing, architectural modeling, and so on and so forth.

All of our benchmark results can also be found in our benchmark engine, Bench.

Chromium Compile (v56)

Our new compilation test uses Windows 10 Pro, VS Community 2015.3 with the Win10 SDK to compile a nightly build of Chromium. We've fixed the test for a build in late March 2017, and we run a fresh full compile in our test. Compilation is the typical example given of a variable threaded workload - some of the compile and linking is linear, whereas other parts are multithreaded.

Office: Chromium Compile (v56)

One of the interesting data points in our test is the Compile, and it is surprising to see the 1920X only just beat the Ryzen 7 chips. Because this test requires a lot of cross-core communication, the fewer cores per CCX there are, the worse the result. This is why the 1950X in SMT-off mode beats the 3 cores-per-CCX 1920X, along with lower latency memory support. We know that this test is not too keen on victim caches either, but it does seem that the 2MB per core ratio does well for the 1950X, and could explain the performance difference moving from 8 to 12 to 16 cores under the Zen microarchitecture.

PCMark8: link

Despite originally coming out in 2008/2009, Futuremark has maintained PCMark8 to remain relevant in 2017. On the scale of complicated tasks, PCMark focuses more on the low-to-mid range of professional workloads, making it a good indicator for what people consider 'office' work. We run the benchmark from the commandline in 'conventional' mode, meaning C++ over OpenCL, to remove the graphics card from the equation and focus purely on the CPU. PCMark8 offers Home, Work and Creative workloads, with some software tests shared and others unique to each benchmark set.

Office: PCMark8 Home (non-OpenCL)

Office: PCMark8 Work (non-OpenCL)

Strangely, PCMark 8's Creative test seems to be failing across the board. We're trying to narrow down the issue.

SYSmark 2014 SE: link

SYSmark is developed by Bapco, a consortium of industry CPU companies. The goal of SYSmark is to take stripped down versions of popular software, such as Photoshop and Onenote, and measure how long it takes to process certain tasks within that software. The end result is a score for each of the three segments (Office, Media, Data) as well as an overall score. Here a reference system (Core i3-6100, 4GB DDR3, 256GB SSD, Integrated HD 530 graphics) is used to provide a baseline score of 1000 in each test.

A note on context for these numbers. AMD left Bapco in the last two years, due to differences of opinion on how the benchmarking suites were chosen and AMD believed the tests are angled towards Intel processors and had optimizations to show bigger differences than what AMD felt was present. The following benchmarks are provided as data, but the conflict of opinion between the two companies on the validity of the benchmark is provided as context for the following numbers.

Office: SYSMark 2014 SE (Overall)

Benchmarking Performance: CPU Encoding Tests Benchmarking Performance: CPU Legacy Tests
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  • Notmyusualid - Sunday, August 13, 2017 - link

    @ Alexey

    Nope - it means comparisons are easier than ever. If that means anything to you.
  • Alexey291 - Monday, August 14, 2017 - link

    Why yes, I can compare some results of performance in software which is so outdated that it's half a dozen major versions behind...

    So as I was saying. Useless information.
  • Lolimaster - Friday, August 11, 2017 - link

    You can add 2 results, one for comparison purposes and one with always the newest version available.
  • Alexey291 - Saturday, August 12, 2017 - link

    Would involve work as opposed to just running a macro once in a while
  • Typo - Thursday, August 10, 2017 - link

    I wonder if the TR 1900x will get its own mode? Something like game mode but still retains smt?
  • Yojimbo - Thursday, August 10, 2017 - link

    It would be cool if you tested time between turns for a few late-game Civilization VI saves.
  • Ian Cutress - Thursday, August 10, 2017 - link

    When the developers of Civ finally listen to me and add in a command line for the AI benchmark, I can script it into my setup. They keep ignoring me. They have a command line for the regular benchmark, but because the AI benchmark was added post release no-one thought to add a command line for it (or publish what the command line flags are). There is an -aibenchmark flag in the disassembled code, but it doesn't do anything, which makes me think that it is disabled for release builds.
  • rtho782 - Thursday, August 10, 2017 - link

    http://www.anandtech.com/show/11685 <--- this link to the motherboard roundup just takes you to the homepage.
  • Ian Cutress - Thursday, August 10, 2017 - link

    It's still a WIP, needs expanding and editing. Will be doing that over the weekend :)
  • Arbie - Thursday, August 10, 2017 - link

    FYI, this sentence needs some repair work:

    "Though it's interesting just how cost the 10-thread Core i9-7900X gets here"

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