SPEC - Multi-Threaded Performance

While the single-threaded numbers were interesting, what we’re all looking after are the multi-core scores and what exactly 80 Neoverse-N1 cores can achieve within a single, and two sockets.

The performance measurements here were limited to quadrant and NPS4 configurations as that’s actually the default settings in which the Altra system came in, and what also AMD usually says customers want to deploy into production, achieving better performance by reducing cross-chip memory traffic.

The main comparison point here against the Q80-33 is AMD’s EPYC 7742 – 80 cores versus 64 cores with SMT, as well as similar TDPs. Intel’s Xeon 8280 with its 28 cores also comes into play but isn’t a credible competitor against the newer generation silicon designs on 7nm.

I’m keeping the detailed result sets limited to single-socket figures – we’ll check out the dual-socket numbers later on in the aggregate chart – essentially the 2S figures are simply 2x the performance.

SPECint2017 Rate-N Estimated Scores (1 Socket)

Starting off with SPECint2017, we’re seeing some absolutely smashing figures here on the part of the Altra Q80-33, with several workloads where the chip significantly outperforms the EPYC 7742, but also losing in some other workloads.

Starting off with the losing workloads, gcc, mcf, and omnetpp, these are all workloads with either high cache pressure or high memory requirements.

The Altra losing out in 502.gcc_r doesn’t come as much of a surprise as we also saw the Graviton2 suffering in this workload – the 1MB per core of L2 as well as 400KB per core of shared L3 really isn’t much and pales against the 4MB/core that’s available to the EPYC’s Zen2 cores. The Altra going from 2.5GHz to 3.3GHz and 64 cores to 80 cores only improves the score from 176.9 to 186.1 in comparison to the Graviton2. I’m not including the Graviton2 in the charts as it’s not quite the apples-to-apples comparisons due to compiler and run environments, but one can look up the scores in that review.

Where the Altra does shine however is in more core-local workloads that are more compute oriented and have less of a memory footprint, of which we see quite a few here, such as 525.x264.

What’s really interesting here is that even though the latter tests in the suite are extremely friendly to SMT scaling on the x86 systems, with 531, 541, 548 and 557 scaling up with SMT threads in MT performance by respectively 30, 43, 25 and 36%, AMD’s Rome CPU still manages to lose to the Altra system by considerable amounts – only being slightly favoured in 557.xz_r by a slight margin – so while SMT helps, it’s not enough to counteract the raw 25% core count advantage of the Altra system when comparing 80 vs 64 cores.

SPECfp2017 Rate-N Estimated Scores

In SPECfp2017, things are also looking favourably for the Altra, although the differences aren’t as favourable except for 511.povray where the raw core count again comes into play.

The Altra again showcases really bad performance in 507.cactuBSSN_r, mirroring the lacklustre single-threaded scores and showing worse performance than a Graviton2 by considerable amounts.

The Arm design does well in 503.bwaves which is fairly high IPC as well as bandwidth hungry, however falls behind in other bandwidth hungry workloads such as 554.roms_r which has more sparse memory stores.

SPEC2017 Rate-N Estimated Total

In the overall scores, both across single-socket and dual-socket systems, the new Altra Q80-33 performs outstandingly well, actually edging out the EPYC system by a small margin in SPECint, though it’s losing out in SPECfp and more cache-heavy workloads.

Beyond testing 1-socket and 2-socket scores, I’ve also taken the opportunity of this new round of testing across the various systems to test out 1 thread per core and 2 thread per core scores across the SMT systems.

While there are definitely workloads that scale well with SMT, overall, the technology has a smaller impact on the suite, averaging out at 15% for both EPYC and Xeon.

One thing we don’t usually do in the way we run SPEC is mixing together rate figures with different thread counts, however with such large core counts and threads it’s something I didn’t want to leave out for this piece. The “mixT” result set takes the best performing sub-score of either the 1T or 2T/core runs for a higher overall aggregate. Usually officially submitted SPEC scores do this by default in their _peak submissions while we usually run _base comparative scores. Even with this best-case methodology for the SMT systems, the Altra system still slightly edges out the performance of the EPYC 7742.

Intel’s Cascade Lake Xeon system here really isn’t of any consideration in the competitive landscape as a single-socket Altra system will outperform a dual-socket Xeon.

The Altra QuickSilver still has one weakness and that’s cache-heavy workloads – 32MB of L3 for 80 cores really isn’t near enough to keep up performance scaling across that many cores. In the end of the day however, it’s up to Ampere’s customers to give input what kind of workloads they use and if they stress the caches or not – given that both Amazon and Ampere chose the minimum cache configuration for their mesh implementations, maybe that’s not the case?

SPEC2017 Rate-N Estimated Per-Thread Performance

Finally, one last figure I wanted to showcase is the per-thread performance of the different designs. While scaling out multi-threaded performance across vast number of cores is a very important way to scale performance, it’s also important to not take a flock of chickens approach with too weak cores. Especially for customers Ampere is targeting, such as enterprise and cloud service providers, many times users will be running things on a subset of a given processor socket cores, so per-core and per-thread performance remains a very important metric.

Simply dividing the single-socket performance figures by the amount of threads run, we get to an average per-thread performance figure in the context of a fully loaded system, a figure that’s actually more realistic than the single-thread figures of the previous page where the rest of the CPU cores in the systems are doing nothing.

In this regard, Intel’s Xeon offering is still extremely competitive and actually takes the lead position here – although its low core count doesn’t favour it at all in the full throughput metrics of the socket, the per-thread performance is still the best amongst the current CPU offerings out there.

In SPECint, the Altra, EPYC and Xeon are all essentially tied in performance, whilst in SPECfp the Xeon takes the lead with the Altra falling notably behind – with the EPYC Rome chip falling in-between the two.

If per-thread performance is important to you, then obviously enough SMT isn’t an option as this vastly regresses performance in favour of a chance to get more aggregate performance across multiple threads. There’s many vendors or enterprise use-cases which for this reason just outright disable SMT.

SPEC - Single-Threaded Performance SPECjbb MultiJVM - Java Performance
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  • Wilco1 - Friday, December 18, 2020 - link

    How exactly is it big? It's tiny for a server chip - 80 cores at about half the die size of a typical 28-core Xeon (~700mm^2). And TSMC 7nm yield is extremely good even for much larger chips like GPUs.
  • Ithaqua - Friday, December 18, 2020 - link

    Plus as with all chips, there may be a 64 / 48 / 32 core version which are just standard chips with the defective core block turned off.
  • eastcoast_pete - Saturday, December 19, 2020 - link

    Note I wrote "quite big", and by transistor count, it's a larger CPU, expected for a server chip. As for the Xeon, how high is Intel's yield for the 28 core Xeon, and that after how many years on 14 nm+++ (etc)? So, if you have a yield number for this 80 core Ampere chip, please share it.
  • Wilco1 - Saturday, December 19, 2020 - link

    It's larger than a mobile SoC, but small for a server chip thanks to Arm's tiny cores and the high density of TSMC 7nm. See https://www.anandtech.com/show/16028/better-yield-... for the defect rate, and from that a simple yield calculator gives 71% for a 350mm^2 die. That's before you fix SRAM defects or harvest dies for the lower-end SKUs. So we conclude yield is very good.
  • eastcoast_pete - Saturday, December 19, 2020 - link

    Glad to read that you've proven Andrei wrong, so maybe you should write these reviews. Here a direct quote from the first page of the review (also, take a look at the pictures: "The chip itself is absolutely humongous and amongst the current publicly available processors is the biggest in the industry, out-sizing AMD’s SP3 form-factor packaging, coming in at around 77 x 66.8mm – about the same length but considerably wider than AMD’s counterparts."
  • Wilco1 - Saturday, December 19, 2020 - link

    How ignorant can you be? Obviously the chip and silicon die have different sizes. The chip is large because it has many pins. The silicon die is a tiny fraction of the chip. We're discussing the size of the silicon die here, not the size of the chip. Completely different things.
  • mode_13h - Sunday, December 20, 2020 - link

    It'd be less confusing if you'd talk about the "package" dimensions.

    I think die and chip are traditionally synonymous. For instance, a package with multiple dies is traditionally called a MCM (Multi-Chip Module).
  • Wilco1 - Monday, December 21, 2020 - link

    Look at Andrei's quote above, there isn't a well-defined term - people use chip/CPU/package etc as synonyms.
  • mode_13h - Monday, December 21, 2020 - link

    But it's not hard to see how "chip" can cause confusion. So, why not avoid it entirely, and just say either "die" or "package".

    Only a troll or someone with an agenda could be against clear communication.
  • Wilco1 - Monday, December 21, 2020 - link

    It's hard to imagine how anyone sane can believe that a "chip measuring 77 x 66.8mm" (6 times the reticle limit!) is referring to the die size rather than the package. Andrei's quote even uses the word package. So maybe you're right and eastcoast_pete was just trolling.

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