Conclusion: It Changes Our Results

When we first published our Ryzen-2000 series review, with HPET forced as the timer in the operating system, our results were broadly showing that the new processors leading the pack. In light of the audit, especially with the way that the Intel gaming results have changed, paint a different picture.

At 1080p, the Core i7-8700K has a clear lead in most titles, although that lead does somewhat vanish moving to 4K, except with Civilization. Ultimately for any user pushing the pixel count, in our tests for the most part, the chips retain parity performance. AMD’s claims for the Ryzen-2000 launch were more focused on the 1440p gaming, however it is clear that there is still margin that benefits Intel at the most popular resolutions, such as 1080p.

Why This Matters, and How AnandTech is Set to Test in the Future

The interesting thing to come out of both Intel and AMD is that they seem to not worry if HPET is enabled or not. Regardless of the advice in the past, both companies seem to be satisfied when HPET is enabled in the BIOS and irreverent when HPET is forced in the OS. For AMD, the result change was slight but notable. For Intel we saw substantial drops in performance when HPET was the forced timer, and removing that lock improved performance.

It would be odd to hear if Intel are not seeing these results internally, and I would expect them to be including an explicit mention of ensuring the HPET settings in the operating system in every testing guide. Or Intel's thinking could be that because HPET not being forced is the default OS position, they might not see it as a setting they need to explicitly mention in their reviewer guides. Unfortunately, this opens up possibilities when it comes to overclocking software interfering with how the timers are being used.

As noted above, overclocking and monitoring tools like Ryzen Master request a restart when used for the first time in order to make sufficient changes to the system to run correctly. Some of this software will be forcing HPET in the BCD in order to enable what it needs to do, and the adjustment is unlikely to be explicitly mentioned in the request to restart. In a standard review, it is typically expected that each system will have a fresh OS and fresh software install, such that systems are tested as if it were new. For any user looking to tune the system, this is the point where any potential software issues could occur. Now should a reviewer decide to first analyze the software bundled with the system before testing or after testing could have significantly different results. It can create a conundrum, as has clearly been the case for us.

Moving forward, the immediate goal here at AnandTech is to ensure that our readers have the most up-to-date and correct results, particularly for our Ryzen 2000-series review. As a result, we are taking a few steps both immediately and in the future to correct our data, update our Ryzen 2000-series review, and to prevent this issue going forward.

First and foremost, we have decided that force-enabling HPET is not how we want to test systems, as this is non-default behavior. While it has an important role in extreme overclocking, to verify accurate timing, ultimately it was akin to taking a sledgehammer to cracking an egg for our testing - we need to be testing systems at stock. So all further CPU testing going forward will be using HPET's default behavior, and we have even put checks in our scripts to ensure this is now the case.

As a result we are retracting our existing results for all of the processors we used in the Ryzen 2000-series review. This goes for both the review and for Bench. All of these products will be updated with revised results using the default HPET behavior just as soon as the updated data is available over the course of the next week. In fact we're already the process of running this updated testing, which we've used for this article and uploaded to Bench.

The end goal here is to cover most of the popular processors from the previous few generations on our existing 2017 benchmark suite in order to fully update and republish our Ryzen 2000-series review. Meanwhile, because the results in that review are still being updated, the conclusion for that review is also being retracted. We don't anticipate updated results meaningfully changing that conclusion, but it is inappropriate to have a conclusion remain published until we have all of the data we need.

Longer-term, because this issue goes back further than just the Ryzen 2000-series review and we are already on the cusp of organizing our 2018 CPU benchmarking suite, we're also accelerating our rollout of that suite. After replacing the data for key hardware on that 2017 test suite, we will be rolling out the 2018 update in earnest. The 2018 CPU benchmarking suite will upgrade to the latest software, drivers, and a change-up on games (F1 2017, Shadow of War, Far Cry 5; also had requests for Deus Ex). Our 2018 suite will require that Spectre and Meltdown patches are in place for the systems we test, to ensure that everyone has access to the latest data.

(ed: It should be noted that this only affects Ian's CPU review data; Brett and Nate run different tools in their laptop and GPU reviews respectively)

Overall we expect to be done collecting data to finish and update the Ryzen 2000-series review next week. After that, it will take some time to roll out the 2018 CPU benchmarking suite data, but that should only be on the order of weeks assuming that there are no further surprises (ed: knock on wood).

We also would like to give all of our readers and colleagues a sincere thank you for assisting with this analysis. We continually strive to publish the best possible data, so your input is and always will be invaluable for finding patterns and oddities we may have missed.

Finally, while we're on the subject of timers, we'd like to throw out an open-ended question to everyone: given what we've found, should the use/requirement of HPET in software be made clearer? Or is there a risk that information being more confusing than helpful? One of the issues we grappled with in writing this article is that while HPET can have a performance impact, it's also not necessarily wrong to use it given its unique accuracy. So we're interested in hearing from all of you on how you think the use of HPET should be documented, so that users aren't caught off-guard by the potential performance impact..

 

Update: 04/26

HPET and Invariant TSC

Since publishing this follow up, several readers have reached out about their experiences with timers, as well as offering deeper explanations of some of the key points in this article. I will attempt to cover some of them here.

The main on-die CPU timer is the Time Stamp Counter (TSC), which was one of the main timers in single core systems. With the movement to multi-core, HPET became the new more accurate timer that as described can protect against clock drift. HPET was preferred to TSC, but can take 10-100x longer to be probed, due to its location on the chipset. The industry however is moving back towards TSC through an Invariant TSC (ITSC), which is a version of TSC that is stable through CPU frequency changes and C-state changes. The ITSC is accessed through the RDTSC instruction, which can be used simultaneously by both the kernel and user code if permitted (unlike HPET, which is a locked timer), and is sufficient for multi-core systems. And although this method still has the RTC bias issue, the lower latency is favoured by all, except overclockers adjusting the platform's 100 MHz base frequency.

TL;DR: HPET can take 1000s of cycles to read, and reading it with multiple cores compounds the issue. Invariant TSC, as a core instruction, is a potential solution with lower latency already in use.

“There is a HPET Bug, No Intel is Not Cheating” and TimerBench

Matthias from Overclockers.at reached out to me and linked me to his article on how they have previously encountered the issue. The article is a nice read, and well worth clicking through:

The HPET bug: What it is and what it isn't

Matthais explains how during their X299 testing, they were experiencing slowdown in their game benchmarks, and pin-pointing the problem with HPET. (We also had similar issues, and didn’t post results, but never got to the bottom of the issue.) As a result, the team over at Overclockers.at developed a tool called TimerBench in order to determine the effect of HPET. As noted, HPET has a much longer latency, but is more accurate.

In the results from overclockers.at one metric stood out: moving from Broadwell-E to Skylake-X meant that the number of theoretical peak HPET calls per second reduced from 1.4 million to 0.2 million – the latency to make a HPET call suddenly became 7x longer with Skylake-X. TimerBench, the tool developed, provides an Unreal 4.7.2 scene and measures timer calls between a system running a game, and one without.

For our results, we used TimerBench on each system with a GTX 1080 in 1920x1080 mode, running fullscreen.

With the HPET timer, the i7-8700K system went from 214k timer calls per second outside of a game down to 144k timer calls per second, which is about the same fraction as with the ITSC timer. The big difference however is the frame rate, decreasing from 289 FPS with ITSC to 238 FPS with HPET, as well as the average GPU load, down from 97.6% to 78.1%. This is shown in the maximum frame time as well.

TimerBench 1.3: GTX 1080 at 1920x1080p
  ITSC HPET Frames
Per Second
Average
GPU Load
Calls OS Calls Game Calls OS Calls
Game
ITSC HPET ITSC HPET
Desktop: GTX 1080 at 1920x1080
Ryzen 7 1800X 27.7m 2.0m 0.4m 0.3m 283 279 96% 95%
Core i7-8700K 40.3m 2.7m 0.2m 0.1m 289 238 98% 78%
Core i7-7820X 35.5m 2.4m 0.2m 0.1m 285 252 95% 83%
Core i7-6700K 36.1m 2.3m 0.2m 0.1m 286 258 96% 85%
Core i7-6950X* 91.8m 1.3m 1.1m 0.6m 285 262 98% 96%
Mobile: MX 150 at 800x600
Core i7-8550U 34.3m 0.9m 0.2m 0.06m 148 137 - -


* No Spectre/Meltdown Patches

When I correlate this data with the systems I have currently running, we see that the AMD Ryzen 7 1800X system is not particularly affected, but all of our Intel systems are: Skylake-S, Skylake-X, Coffee Lake, and even our mobile device. What is clear that the HPET timer is causing performance degredation by virtue of having a lower average GPU load. If the GPU is waiting on the same timing delays caused by HPET, this would lover the overall GPU load.

So this interesting correlation leads me to think that maybe this issue, aside from potential Spectre/Meltdown related points, is related to the chipset. HPET circuits are normally found on the chipset/southbridge, and in this case Intel has a wide HSIO chipset design in all the systems tested. As the chipset is, among other things, a PCIe switch, then it has various buffers to deal with the data coming in and out. The effect of these wide chipset and buffers might be part of the HPET issue. I need to go dig out an older system.

Forcing HPET On, Plus Spectre and Meltdown Patches
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  • Lord of the Bored - Thursday, April 26, 2018 - link

    Not just nVidia. AMD's graphics division has been known to do it too, going back to when it was still an independent company. See: QUAFF3.EXE
  • Maxiking - Saturday, April 28, 2018 - link

    Yeah like AMD was using less demanding tessellation to boost their score in benchmarks or less demanding AF ignoring completely what an application set. . Oh yeah, I forgot, when the same thing happened to AMD, it was a bug, when to Nvidia, cheating. Those double standards are hilarious.
  • Fallen Kell - Wednesday, April 25, 2018 - link

    The overhead of HPET causes the Intel CPUs to effectively slow down with the combination of the Meltdown+Spectre fixes. HPET is a system call which results in the harshest penalty of the fixes for Meltdown+Spectre. Add to the fact that Intel's implementation of HPET is higher fidelity (i.e. higher speed clock rate) than the specification requires, and then combine that higher fidelity with creating an even larger load on the CPU (due to Meltdown+Spectre), and it creates the large performance degradation.

    The other timers (TSC + lapic) do not incur as high a penalty, as these do not result in system calls which need to be protected from Meltdown/Spectre exploitation.
  • mczak - Wednesday, April 25, 2018 - link

    The higher clock the HPET runs at for intel should make absolutely no difference - it's the cost of reading the timer which counts, the rate it's running at should not be relevant. (Although I higher frequency may have higher hw implementation cost.).
    For this kind of slowdown as shown in some games though there have to be LOTS of timer queries. But I suppose it's definitely possible (I suspect nowadays everyone uses the TSC based queries and forget to test without them being available), which are much faster in hw and don't require syscalls. Meltdown (and probably to a lesser degree Spectre) could indeed have a big impact on performance with HPET (if there's that many timing queries). I'd like to see some data with HPET but without these patches.
  • looncraz - Wednesday, April 25, 2018 - link

    I believe, from my own testing, that it's merely a factor of reporting. HPET has always resulted in a smoother, faster, system with less stutters when I enable it.

    I also use SetTimerResolutionService to great effect.
  • tamalero - Thursday, April 26, 2018 - link

    Its interesting how it is very different from person to person.

    I usually had HPET on with my intel Quadcores..

    But once I got my Threadripper I had to disable and remove HPET. If not I would get horrible stuttering.
  • GreenReaper - Friday, April 27, 2018 - link

    It may be more *responsive*, yet able to do less work. In fact, speed and latency can be opposites - if you never pick your head up while doing a task, you'll probably execute it in the fastest possible time, at the expense of anything else that you might have wanted to do during that time. Most interactive users don't appreciate the computer not paying attention to them, so desktop computers tradeoff for speed for reduced latency - although with multi-core systems the impact is small.

    In the past when the TSC was not present, HPET also moved the system more towards being a real-time system, and the cost of that the overhead of the more frequent timer checks. Nowadays, especially with nonstop TSC (not impacted by power management), I'm not sure that is the case, but using it might still change latency - for good or ill.

    Enabling HPET does not mandate forcing its use over the alternatives, but mandating it with 'bcdedit /set useplatformclock true' does. You can do the equivalent on Linux. And clearly, there is a cost, although that cost varies greatly depending on the platform and what you are doing.

    Over the years I've seen numerous cases of people trying to reduce the number of gettimeofday calls to increase performance, and the cost of checking the HPET is probably one of the reasons.
  • Ryan Smith - Thursday, April 26, 2018 - link

    "But is there a 'real' performance impact or does default HPET behavior simply introduce a fudge factor that alters how the tools report the numbers? Is there a way to verify the results externally?"

    Yes, you can compare the clocks with various applications, including the Timers applications. Which in our case shows that neither the ACPI nor QPC timers are drifting versus the HPET timer. So the performance difference really is a performance difference, and not a loss of timer accuracy.

    https://images.anandtech.com/doci/12678/TimerBench...
  • chrcoluk - Wednesday, April 25, 2018 - link

    Disabling TSC is a big nono.

    Forced HPET as an example will disable optimised interrupts for network cards, the AMD and intel review support staff probably dont have the knowledge to correctly advise you. I suggest you contact microsoft.

    Also your cpu's tested, what decides what cpu's you decided to compare to? the AMD review guide or something else? Was a lot of omitted CPU's and noticeably no manual overclocked intel cpu's in your data.

    See my first reply, if AMD software is forcing HPET and especially if they not informing the user the consequences of doing this then thats very irresponsible.
  • eddman - Thursday, April 26, 2018 - link

    Some rather interesting info on timers from MS: https://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/windows/d...

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