Legacy: 7-zip

While standalone compression and decompression are not real world benchmarks (at least as far as servers go), servers have to perform these tasks as part of a larger role (e.g. database compression, website optimization). With that said, we suggest you take these benchmarks with a large grain of salt, as they are not really important in grand scheme of things. We still use 7zip 9.2, so you can compare with much older results. 

LZMA Compression

Compression on modern cores relies almost solely on cache, memory latency, and TLB efficiency. This is definitely not the ideal situation for AMD's EPYC CPU, but the EPYC 7742 scales very well, offering 77% higher performance than Naples. That is better than expected scaling. 

LZMA Decompression

Decompression relies on less common integer instructions (shift, multiply). AMD's Zen2 core handles these instructions even better because doubling the cores results in no less than 127% (!) better performance. 

Even though this benchmark is not that important, it is nevertheless impressive how AMD engineering made this graph look. Never have we seen AMD dominating benchmarks by such a wide margin. 

Before people accuse us of choosing a benchmark that shows AMD in the best light, consider this benchmark as one of our synthetic tests more than anything else, designed to showcase core execution port potential. It is not really indicative of any real-world performance, but acts as a synthetic for those that have requested this data.

Multi-core SPEC CPU2006 Java Performance: Max-jOPS
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  • schujj07 - Friday, August 9, 2019 - link

    The problem is Microsoft went to the Oracle model of licensing for Server 2016/19. That means that you have to license EVERY CPU core it can be run on. Even if you create a VM with only 8 cores, those 8 cores won't always be running on the same cores of the CPU. That is where Rome hurts the pockets of people. You would pay $10k/instance of Server Standard on a single dual 64 core host or $65k/host for Server DataCenter on a dual 64 core host.
  • browned - Saturday, August 10, 2019 - link

    We are currently a small MS shop, VMWare with 8 sockets licensed, Windows Datacenter License. 4 Hosts, 2 x 8 core due to Windows Licensing limits. But we are running 120+ majority Windows systems on those hosts.

    I see our future with 4 x 16 core systems, unless our CPU requirements grow, in which case we could look at 3 x 48 or 2 x 64 core or 4 x 24 core and buy another lot of datacenter licenses. Because we already have 64 cores licensed the uplift to 96 or 128 is not something we would worry about.

    We would also get a benefit from only using 2, 3, or 4 of our 8 VMWare socket licenses. We could them implement a better DR system, or use those licenses at another site that currently use Robo licenses.
  • jgraham11 - Thursday, August 8, 2019 - link

    so how does it work with hyper threaded CPUs? And what if the server owner decides to not run Intel Hyperthreading because it is so prone to CPU exploits (most 10 yrs+ old). Does Google still pay for those cores??
  • ianisiam - Thursday, August 8, 2019 - link

    You only pay for physical cores, not logical.
  • twotwotwo - Thursday, August 8, 2019 - link

    Sort of a fun thing there is that in the past you've had to buy more cores than you need sometimes: lower-end parts that had enough CPU oomph may not support all the RAM or I/O you want, or maybe some feature you wanted was absent or disabled. These seem to let you load up on RAM and I/O at even 8C or 16C (min. 1P or 2P configs).

    Of course, some CPU-bound apps can't take advantage of that, but in the right situation being able to build as lopsided a machine as you want might even help out the folks who pay by the core.
  • azfacea - Wednesday, August 7, 2019 - link

    F
  • NikosD - Wednesday, August 7, 2019 - link

    Ok guys...The Anandtech's team had a "bad luck and timming issues" to offer a true and decent review of the Greatest x86 CPU of all time, so for a proper review of EPYC Rome coming from the most objective and capable site for servers, take a look here:
    https://www.servethehome.com/amd-epyc-7002-series-...
  • anactoraaron - Thursday, August 8, 2019 - link

    F
  • phoenix_rizzen - Saturday, August 10, 2019 - link

    Review article for new CPU devolves into Windows vs Linux pissing match, completely obscuring any interesting discussion about said hardware. We really haven't reached peak stupid on the internet yet. :(
  • The Benjamins - Wednesday, August 7, 2019 - link

    Can we get a C20 benchmark for the lulz?

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