The Snapdragon 855 SoC - A Recap

Although the Galaxy S10 is the first Snapdragon 855 device we’re reviewing, Qualcomm’s new chipset shouldn’t come with any major surprises. We had the opportunity to conduct an extensive and in-depth performance preview back in January at CES, which answered a lot of our initial questions about Qualcomm's new flagship SoC. Indeed the Snapdragon 855 largely met our expectations: The new CPU on the new process node  performs very similarly to the other 7nm + A76 design we've already seen – the Kirin 980 chipset from HiSilicon – with only minor differences on the CPU complex.

Where Qualcomm strongly differs from the competition is in in the auxiliary accelerator blocks such as GPU, DSP and the new tensor units. Let’s go over the specifications again:

Qualcomm Snapdragon Flagship SoCs 2018-2019
SoC

Snapdragon 855

Snapdragon 845
CPU 1x Kryo 485 Gold (A76 derivative)
@ 2.84GHz 1x512KB pL2

3x Kryo 485 Gold (A76 derivative)
@ 2.42GHz 3x256KB pL2

4x Kryo 485 Silver (A55 derivative)
@ 1.80GHz 4x128KB pL2

2MB sL3 @ 1612MHz
4x Kryo 385 Gold (A75 derivative)
@ 2.8GHz 4x256KB pL2

4x Kryo 385 Silver (A55 derivative)
@ 1.80GHz 4x128KB pL2

2MB sL3 @ 1478MHz
GPU Adreno 640 @ 585MHz Adreno 630 @ 710MHz
Memory
Controller
4x 16-bit CH @ 2092MHz
LPDDR4X
33.4GB/s

3MB system level cache
4x 16-bit CH @ 1866MHz
LPDDR4X
29.9GB/s

3MB system level cache
ISP/Camera Dual 14-bit Spectra 380 ISP
1x 48MP or 2x 22MP
Dual 14-bit Spectra 280 ISP
1x 32MP or 2x 16MP
Encode/
Decode
2160p60 10-bit H.265
HDR10, HDR10+, HLG
720p480
2160p60 10-bit H.265
720p480
Integrated Modem Snapdragon X24 LTE
(Category 20)

DL = 2000Mbps
7x20MHz CA, 256-QAM, 4x4

UL = 316Mbps
3x20MHz CA, 256-QAM
Snapdragon X20 LTE
(Category 18/13)

DL = 1200Mbps
5x20MHz CA, 256-QAM, 4x4

UL = 150Mbps
2x20MHz CA, 64-QAM
Mfc. Process TSMC
7nm (N7)
Samsung
10nm LPP

The Snapdragon 855 is Qualcomm’s first SoC powered by Arm’s new Cortex-A76 CPU core, which we also saw in the Kirin 980. Qualcomm still makes use of Arm’s “Built on Cortex Technology” license, where it requests changes to the CPU IP to be delivered by Arm. The end product ends up marketed as a Kryo CPU – in the case of the Snapdragon 855 the new “Kryo 485” CPU.

In past iterations it’s not always been clear exactly what changes Qualcomm had made to the CPU cores, so it was a surprising and much welcomed change to have the company actually provide concrete examples in the case of the new Snapdragon 855 CPU cores: The two big disclosed changes are an increase of the core’s reorder buffer from 128 entries to a higher, unspecified amount, as well as tuning the prefetchers to better work with floating point workloads.

The one thing that makes the Snapdragon 855 unusual though is the new physical CPU configuration. Both the Kirin 980 as well as the Snapdragon 855 both contain four Cortex A76 cores, however the two companies implement these in two completely different ways.

While HiSilicon had opted for a 2+2 core configuration where one pair clocks up to 2.6GHz and the other only reaches 1.92GHz, Qualcomm opts to go with a 1+3 setup. Under Qualcomm's setup one core is clocked up to 2.84GHz, and meanwhile the other three cores reach up to 2.42GHz. While at first glance this makes sense, things get confusing when accounting for the fact that the Snapdragon still only has a single voltage plane for all four CPU cores, whereas the Kirin’s CPU pairs both have their dedicated rails.

Qualcomm has explained that this was a deliberate choice which took into account the actual benefits, as well as (most importantly) the costs of the platform. Having an additional voltage rail means your PMIC needs an additional buck converter and you need to have additional inductors and capacitors on the motherboard, a cost not only in terms of actual component costs but also in terms of valuable PCB space.

What this means is that the power difference between the two CPU groups is much less than one would expect, but most interestingly it will be a difference that is solely dictated by the different physical implementations of the two cores.

In later sections we’ll address the efficiency difference between the two groups of cores, and one thing that was surprising is that the “middle” cores weren’t that much more efficient than the “prime” core. I extracted the power curves out of the scheduler, as dictated by Qualcomm, and this reveals a bit more information and clarification.

What we see is that the middle “Gold” cores’ power curve shape is shifted down towards lower power, meaning it starts growing at an exponential rate earlier than what we see on the “Prime” core. This would explain why at peak performance, the efficiency difference between the two cores is minor. When we look at the middle frequency points in particular though, we see what this power difference is more notable and actually at its greatest point does represent up to 20% lower power on the mid cores compares to the prime core.

Qualcomm also differentiates the large CPU cores by their cache configuration: The Prime core gets 512KB of L2 while the middle cores make due with 256KB. The Cortex A55’s have the usual 128KB and Qualcomm clocks them conservatively at 1.78GHz.

Finally, the DSU’s L3 cache comes in at 2MB. A big question I had is exactly how fast Qualcomm had clocked the cache at, and the answer is 1.6GHz. This represents a slight increase over the 1478MHz of the L3 cache found in the Snapdragon 845.

Other large architectural changes in the Snapdragon 855 are the new Adreno 640 GPU. Here Qualcomm supposedly has increased the execution units by 50% - yet only advertise a 20% boost in performance. The explanation here lies in the clock frequency of the new GPU. The Adreno 640 in the Snapdragon 855 runs at only 585MHz, markedly slower than the 710MHz of the Adreno 630. I suspect that Qualcomm saw some of the increasing power usage of the higher clock frequencies and decided it’s better to go wider and slower. Indeed, we’ll see that the Snapdragon 855 has managed to reduce power usage in 3D workloads ever so slightly compared to the Snapdragon 845 – something which should definitely help thermals and sustained performance.

Finally, the new Hexagon 690 DSP block has seen its biggest change in several years. Scalar performance has gone up by 20% through microarchitectural and clock frequency bumps, but most importantly the DSP's vector unit count has been doubled up from two to four units, doubling the HVX performance of the new cores. This is something that will be particularly visible in the AI workloads we’ll cover shortly.

The new tensor accelerator block in the Hexagon IP is a new fixed function unit that is meant to be used for machine inferencing. Currently this unit should likely be exclusively used by Samsung’s first-party software such as the camera app, as Qualcomm won't make it available to NNAPI until later in the year in Android Q. As we’ll see later on, API compatibility and availability these days is going to be a bigger worry than actual hardware performance for these SoCs.

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  • Thraxen - Friday, March 29, 2019 - link

    I’m in that customization category and also not technically naive so avoiding any security issues is, well, as natural as not falling for e-mail scams. Anyway, I’m typing this reply on my iPad Pro and like it quite a bit, but compared to my S10 it’s boring as hell. The phone just feels more exciting while the iPad feels... safe? Like it was jointly produced by Fisher Price or something.
  • jaju123 - Sunday, March 31, 2019 - link

    Lol, I have the same experience. The iPad pro 11 that I have is like a kids version of what a mobile OS should be. I can barely do anything on it, whereas android on my mate 20 pro feels like an OS for adults.
  • Thraxen - Sunday, March 31, 2019 - link

    Exactly. I love customizing my phone. I can add widgets (real ones, not that card BS on iOS), change the screen grid layout, change all the icons or just one, use live wall papers (real ones, not that handful of very limited ones on iOS), add automation with apps like Tasker, change the dialer/contacts/etc apps, change how notification functions, etc, etc, etc...

    If there’s something you don’t like how it works or looks on Android there’s a very good chance you can change it. On iOS everything is Apple’s way. And I get the logic there. Apple is big on having a very consistent user experience. But for someone like me it’s painfully boring. Everyone’s iOS devices look the same. So one hand it means you are immediately comfortable using any iOS devices, but on the other it’s like living in one of those neighborhoods where the boulder used the same floor plan for every house. It’s soul sucking boring.
  • Speedfriend - Friday, March 29, 2019 - link

    I use a iPhone and Android daily, and despite benchmarks saying that my iPhone 7 is much faster than my pixel 2 XL, in reality it is slower, takes longer to log into new WiFi, kills apps in the background and takes far worse photos. Plus it is loaded with bloatware I can't even remove off the home screen and can't even rearrange the home screen with icons at the bottom.
  • Wardrive86 - Friday, March 29, 2019 - link

    This is absolutely true. My job always upgrades me to the latest Iphone and Ipad. After having multiple generations of Iphone, browser performance is not as good as benchmarks suggest. Personal and work are always on the same network either WiFi or Verizon.
  • GekkePrutser - Saturday, March 30, 2019 - link

    That's because Apple skimps so much on memory. They make great SoCs but their memory skimping hurts the overall experience by killing off apps in the background too much. Especially after one or two iOS updates it becomes really bad.
  • Irish910 - Saturday, March 30, 2019 - link

    That’s just a blatant lie. I used an iPhone 7 Plus for almost 2 years and the thing was hella fast. Using my XS Max I can barely see a speed difference under most circumstances. The only thing that might seem “faster” is the non animations of apps in android. iOS is much more fluid and smooth. But memory, chipset and software, the iPhone should be faster.
  • arayoflight - Saturday, March 30, 2019 - link

    That applies only to the US. The iPhones are much, much more expensive outside of US. In my country, the 128GB S10+ costs less than the base 64GB iPhone XR (yes, the XR). If you are going to get comparable, even the base XS max costs about 1.5x of the S10+, and comes with half the storage to boot.

    Not to mention that Apple phones don't work that well outside US as well. There are no ubiquitous Apple stores which fix your problems immediately, Apple maps doesn't work well, or siri with non-US accents. You can't disable or set defaults to google assistant or google maps or chrome as well, so good luck. Also, the rest of the world doesn't use imessage, but WhatsApp.

    iPhones are a much worse deal outside of US, They have excellent performance and displays yes, but they aren't excellent value for the atrocious prices you pay.
  • cha0z_ - Tuesday, April 9, 2019 - link

    This, when I got my (sadly exynos as EU) note 9 it was HALF the price of the XS max 256GB at my carrier both and with deal. I literally could take two note 9 instead of a single xs max 256GB. Even if we argue that the xs max is a better phone (tho in reality it has it's + and - compared to the note 9), is it two times the price better? Had the money to buy both, but tbh I like android generally more. Tho I must admit that the iphones are a lot a lot smoother... got iphone 6s too and it's smoother than the note 9 and that's not exactly making me happy. :D
  • id4andrei - Saturday, March 30, 2019 - link

    You keep saying Android's security problems like it's an axiom. You're just as safe with a high end Android device like you are with an iphone. Android does not have ads. Tracking can be disabled or enabled with as much ease as on ios.

    Stop spreading bullshit. You are tracked and monetized on ios via 3rd parties just like on Android. Ios gathers data about you just like Android.

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