Synthetic Graphics Performance

Moving on, let’s take a look at the synthetic graphics performance of the Titan V. As this is the first graphics-enabled product using the GV100 GPU, this can potentially give us some insight into the yet-untapped graphics capabilities of the Volta architecture. However the usual disclaimer about earlier drivers and early hardware is very much in effect here: we don’t know for sure how consumer Volta parts will be configured, and in the meantime it’s not clear just how well the Volta drivers have been optimized for graphics.

Synthetic: TessMark, Image Set 4, 64x Tessellation

Right now the graphics aspects of the Volta architecture are something of a black box, and tessellation performance with TessMark reflects this. On Pascal, NVIDIA has one Polymorph engine per TPC; if this is the same on GV100, then Titan V has around 40% more geometry hardware than Titan Xp. On the other hand, the actual throughput rate of Polymorph engines has varied over the years as NVIDIA has dialed it up or down in line with their performance goals and the number of such hardware units available. So for all we know, Titan V’s Polymorph engines don’t pack the same punch as Titan Xp’s.

At any rate, Titan V once again comes away with a win. But the 16% lead is not a day-and-night difference, unlike what we’ve seen with compute.

Beyond3D Suite

Meanwhile for looking at texel and pixel fillrate, we have the Beyond3D Test Suite.

Synthetic: Beyond3D Suite - Pixel Fillrate

Starting with the pixel throughput benchmark, I’m actually a bit surprised the difference is as great as it is. As discussed earlier, on paper the Titan V has lower ROP throughput than the Titan Xp, owing to lower clockspeeds. And yet in this case it’s still in the lead by 18%. It’s not a massive difference, but it means the picture is more complex than naïve interpretation of GV100 being a bigger Pascal. This may be an under-the-hood efficiency improvement (such as compression), or it could just be due to Titan V’s raw bandwidth advantage. This will be worth keeping an eye on once NVIDIA starts talking about consumer Volta cards.

Synthetic: Beyond3D Suite - Integer Texture Fillrate (INT8)

Synthetic: Beyond3D Suite - Floating Point Texture Fillrate (FP32)

As for texel throughput, it’s interesting that INT8 and FP32 texture throughput gains are so divergent. Titan V is showing much greater INT8 texture throughput gains than it is FP32; and Titan Xp was no slouch in that department to begin with. I’m curious whether this is a product of separating the integer ALUs from the FP ALUs on Volta, or whether NVIDIA has made some significant changes to their texture mapping units.

3DMark Fire Strike Ultra

I’ve also gone ahead and run Futuremark’s 3DMark Fire Strike Ultra benchmark on the Titans. This benchmark is a bit older, but it’s a better understood (and better optimized) DX11 benchmark.

Synthetic: 3DMark Fire Strike Ultra (4K) - Graphics Score

The results here find the Titan V in the lead, but not by much: just 8%. Relative to Pascal/Titan Xp, Titan V’s performance advantages and architectural improvements are inconsistent, in as much as not everything has been improved to the same degree. These results point to a bottleneck elsewhere – perhaps the ROPs? – but don’t isolate it. More significantly though, it’s an indication that while Titan V can do graphics, perhaps it’s not well-built (or at least well-optimized) for the task.

SPECViewPerf 12.1.1

Finally, while SPECViewPerf’s component software packages are more for the professional visualization side of the market – and NVIDIA doesn’t optimize the GeForce driver stack for these programs – I wanted to quickly run all of the Titans through the test all the same, just to see what we’d get.

NVIDIA Titan Cards SPECviewperf 12.1 FPS Scores
  Titan V Titan Xp GTX Titan X GTX Titan
3dsmax-05 176.3 173.7 133.1 100.3
catia-04 180.3 181.4 71.3 24.1
creo-01 119.4 122.1 41.0 30.1
energy-01 27.7 21.2 8.7 5.8
maya-04 159.0 152.0 131.6 98.6
medical-01 89.4 91.9 39.9 27.7
showcase-01 175.5 167.0 98.7 67.0
snx-02 223.2 225.3 7.37 4.1
sw-03 110.1 100.7 52.2 41.3

The end result is actually quite interesting. The Titan V only wins a bit more than it loses, as the card doesn’t pick up much in the way of performance versus the Titan Xp. Professional visualization tasks tend to be more ROP-bound, so this may be a consequence of that, and I wouldn’t read too much into this versus anything Quadro (or what a Quadro GV100 card could do). But it illustrates once again how Titan V has improved at some tasks by more than it has in others.

Compute Performance: Geekbench 4, Folding @ Home, & CompuBench Gaming Performance
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  • Notmyusualid - Friday, December 22, 2017 - link

    Eth, simple O/C 82MH/s.

    I bow before thee...
  • Dugom - Saturday, December 23, 2017 - link

    Will you test the 388.71 ?

    The 388.59 doesn't support officialy the TITAN V...
  • Nate Oh - Saturday, December 23, 2017 - link

    Yes, it does. On page 7 of 388.59 Release Notes: "New Product Support: Added support for the NVIDIA TITAN V" [1].

    [1] https://us.download.nvidia.com/Windows/388.59/388....
  • karthik.hegde - Sunday, December 24, 2017 - link

    Why no one is talking about the Actual FLOPS/Peak FLOPS ? Clearly, achieving a constant 110TFLOPs that Titan has at disposal is simply not possible. What's the consistent FLOPS it can achieve before Memory Bandwidth becomes a bottleneck? When 12GB of VRAM isn't enough to hold all your data (Neural net training), then you're doing as good as previous gens.
  • mode_13h - Wednesday, December 27, 2017 - link

    That's why you use batching, sampling, and ultimately pay the big bucks for their Tesla hardware.
  • Shaklee3 - Wednesday, December 27, 2017 - link

    To the authors: what matrix size and what sample application did you use to hit 100TFLOPS on the tensor benchmark?
  • mode_13h - Thursday, December 28, 2017 - link

    You might have better luck getting a response either on Twitter or perhaps this thread:

    https://forum.beyond3d.com/threads/nvidia-volta-sp...

    In fact, the first post on that page seems to answer your question.
  • linksys - Saturday, January 6, 2018 - link

    nice post it is.
    <a href="https://www.interspire.com/forum/member.php?u=5179... Router Customer Service</a>

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