CPU Performance: Rendering Tests

Rendering is often a key target for processor workloads, lending itself to a professional environment. It comes in different formats as well, from 3D rendering through rasterization, such as games, or by ray tracing, and invokes the ability of the software to manage meshes, textures, collisions, aliasing, physics (in animations), and discarding unnecessary work. Most renderers offer CPU code paths, while a few use GPUs and select environments use FPGAs or dedicated ASICs. For big studios however, CPUs are still the hardware of choice.

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

Corona 1.3: Performance Render

An advanced performance based renderer for software such as 3ds Max and Cinema 4D, the Corona benchmark renders a generated scene as a standard under its 1.3 software version. Normally the GUI implementation of the benchmark shows the scene being built, and allows the user to upload the result as a ‘time to complete’.

We got in contact with the developer who gave us a command line version of the benchmark that does a direct output of results. Rather than reporting time, we report the average number of rays per second across six runs, as the performance scaling of a result per unit time is typically visually easier to understand.

The Corona benchmark website can be found at https://corona-renderer.com/benchmark

Corona 1.3 Benchmark

Interestingly both 9900KS settings performed slightly worse than the 9900K here, which you wouldn't expect given the all-core turbo being higher. It would appear that there is something else the bottleneck in this test.

Blender 2.79b: 3D Creation Suite

A high profile rendering tool, Blender is open-source allowing for massive amounts of configurability, and is used by a number of high-profile animation studios worldwide. The organization recently released a Blender benchmark package, a couple of weeks after we had narrowed our Blender test for our new suite, however their test can take over an hour. For our results, we run one of the sub-tests in that suite through the command line - a standard ‘bmw27’ scene in CPU only mode, and measure the time to complete the render.

Blender can be downloaded at https://www.blender.org/download/

Blender 2.79b bmw27_cpu Benchmark

All the 9900 parts and settings perform roughly the same with one another, however the PL2 255W setting on the 9900KS does allow it to get a small ~5% advantage over the standard 9900K.

LuxMark v3.1: LuxRender via Different Code Paths

As stated at the top, there are many different ways to process rendering data: CPU, GPU, Accelerator, and others. On top of that, there are many frameworks and APIs in which to program, depending on how the software will be used. LuxMark, a benchmark developed using the LuxRender engine, offers several different scenes and APIs.

In our test, we run the simple ‘Ball’ scene on both the C++ and OpenCL code paths, but in CPU mode. This scene starts with a rough render and slowly improves the quality over two minutes, giving a final result in what is essentially an average ‘kilorays per second’.

LuxMark v3.1 C++

Both 9900KS settings perform equally well here, and a sizeable jump over the standard 9900K.

POV-Ray 3.7.1: Ray Tracing

The Persistence of Vision ray tracing engine is another well-known benchmarking tool, which was in a state of relative hibernation until AMD released its Zen processors, to which suddenly both Intel and AMD were submitting code to the main branch of the open source project. For our test, we use the built-in benchmark for all-cores, called from the command line.

POV-Ray can be downloaded from http://www.povray.org/

POV-Ray 3.7.1 Benchmark

One of the biggest differences between the two power settings is in POV-Ray, with a marked frequency difference. In fact, the 159W setting on the 9900KS puts it below our standard settings for the 9900K, which likely had an big default turbo budget on the board it was on at the time.

CPU Performance: System Tests CPU Performance: Encoding Tests
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  • AshlayW - Friday, November 1, 2019 - link

    People like you are why Nvidia and Intel can get away with this xD
  • Spunjji - Friday, November 1, 2019 - link

    $1000 to switch platforms? Wut? $500 CPU, $200 motherboard, and then what..?
  • GreenReaper - Saturday, November 2, 2019 - link

    That's not true; according to Phoronix it has additional hardware mitigations to reduce context switching times.
  • brantron - Sunday, November 3, 2019 - link

    Still haven't seen anything about the ring bus clock.

    Silicon Lottery posted their 9900KS binning results: 5 GHz at 1.250v, 5.1 GHz at 1.287v, and 5.2 GHz at 1.325v. The most recent numbers for 9900K and 9900KF had 5 GHz at 1.30v.

    After the rather uneventful 8086K, if this is going to be a recurring thing, I think they need a little more special sauce. For example, cleaner solder and/or lapped IHS.
  • crashtech - Thursday, October 31, 2019 - link

    The box is dodecahedral, a minor quibble.
  • Khenglish - Thursday, October 31, 2019 - link

    @Ian I feel like fanboyism is on the rise at Anandtech article comments sections lately, but I'm not sure if it's just a nostalgia thing where I just think the past was better. Do you have an archive of the comments from P4 vs Athlon-xp, Athlon64 days? I swear back then was just a simpler time of "In Soviet Russia... " jokes.
  • Slash3 - Thursday, October 31, 2019 - link

    It's definitely worse.
  • Spunjji - Friday, November 1, 2019 - link

    I think it's a symptom of wider trends on the internet. Astroturfing on tech forums has been a thing for a while now, so people are even more suspicious of the motives of others. The communities are larger, so there are more names to keep track of and less trust as a result. More people have learned stupid "debate" tactics like whataboutism and gish galloping from useless right-wing Youtubers, so even small disagreements and misunderstandings spiral out into lengthy pissing matches.
  • AshlayW - Friday, November 1, 2019 - link

    I like to think my comments aren't 'Faboyism' but I am very open that I absolutely hate Intel as a company. Here's one for the 9900KS:

    "In Soviet Russia, CPU buys YOU"
  • Jorgp2 - Friday, November 1, 2019 - link

    I blame /r/pcmasterrace

    Just a big circlejerk

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