Power & Efficiency - 10nm Gains

Power efficiency in the server world infers performance, as the more efficient a CPU is, the more compute power is available in a given TDP. Ice Lake in this regard is extremely interesting given it’s Intel’s first 10nm server design, and in theory should represent a major leap forward for the new 3rd Gen Xeon line-up.

The comparison here is a bit rough this time around, as we’re dealing with a bit of a apples-and-oranges comparisons between the generational SKUs, particularly the 40-core 270W Xeon 8380 and the 28-core 205W Xeon 8280. Fortunately, we had also been sourced a Xeon 6330 from a third vendor, which is a 28-core 205W Ice Lake SP part, which should make generational comparisons a bit more interesting and fairer, although still not quite optimal as we’ll see.

Package Idle Power

Starting off with idle package power, this was something I had made note of in our coverage of AMD’s Milan CPUs a few weeks ago, where the new AMD chip had regressed in terms of apparent IOD power and eating through the power envelope of the socket resulting in some compute performance regressions.

It’s to be noted that we’re not exactly comparing apples-to-apples here, as AMD’s designs are full SoCs, while the Intel CPUs are merely just CPUs that require the usage of an external chipset (Lewisburg Refresh) which by itself uses about 18W, essentially moving that power requirement off-socket. Intel has multiple versions of the chipset on offer, based on Compression/Encryption offload requirements, up to 28.6 W.

Ice Lake Xeon Chipsets
AnandTech SKU Compression
Encryption
RSA TDP
C621A LBG-1G None None 18.0 W
C627A LBG-T 65 Gbps / 100 Gbps 100K OPS 28.6 W
C629A LGB-C 80 Gbps / 100 Gbps None 28.6 W

Intel’s new Ice Lake SP system, similarly to the predecessor Cascade Lake SP system, appear to be very efficient at full system idle, reaching only around 27W per socket. It’s to be noted that these figures are only valid when both sockets are idle, if one socket is under load, the second socket’s power consumption will also grow in tandem even though it’s idle, we’ve seen idle figures up to 70W when the other socket is under full load, and even 90W when one socket is boosting frequencies very high. I suspect this is due to voltages and shared power delivery of the 2-socket system. Generally, it’s not of concern in the real world, but it’s just an interesting titbit to make note of.

The more interesting efficiency data is the actual power and energy consumption under load, and the corresponding performance between the generations. Again, we’re in a bit of a difficult situation here as the comparison isn’t as straightforward as the AMD Milan figures from a few weeks ago where we were comparing equal core-count and equal-TDP SKUs.

The new Xeon 8380 flagship Ice Lake SP CPU comes in at a default TDP of 270W, which is 65W higher than its direct predecessor, the 8280, and also features many more cores. Alongside the 270W default setting, I measured this part under a 205W limited power setting to add an extra data-point.

The Xeon 6330 seems a direct match to the Xeon 8280 (which in turn is identical to a Xeon 6258R), however this ICX part comes in at only $1894 versus the $3950 price point of the 6258R, a pricing that might be indicative of the quality of the silicon bin of this SKU, a point I’ll return to in just a bit.

Intel doesn’t make available core-only power metrics on its recent server chips, so we fall back to total package energy measurements only. I add in the total socket energy consumption for the duration of all workloads, as well as the performance and energy measurements on a per-thread basis as we’re dealing with different core-count designs here.

Ice Lake-SP vs Cascade Lake-SP
Power & Energy Efficiency Estimates
SKU Xeon 8380

(Ice Lake-SP)
Xeon 6330

(Ice Lake-SP)
Xeon 8280

(Cascade Lake-SP)
TDP Setting 270W
 
205W
(RAPL Limit)
205W 205W
 
Threads 80 56
  Perf
 
PKG
(W)
Perf PKG
(W)
Perf PKG
(W)
Perf PKG
(W)
500.perlbench_r 190 268 165 204 123 204 119 204
502.gcc_r 167 266 152 204 121 204 105 203
505.mcf_r 117 263 112 204 92 205 71 201
520.omnetpp_r 99 264 94 204 71 204 69 204
523.xalancbmk_r 136 256 124 204 94 203 91 196
525.x264_r 362 268 309 204 226 204 242 204
531.deepsjeng_r 163 268 140 204 101 204 107 205
541.leela_r 166 268 146 204 101 205 107 204
548.exchange2_r 290 269 248 204 178 205 170 205
557.xz_r 120 264 105 204 79 204 86 204
SPECint2017 est. 167.6 265 149.1 204 111.5 204 108.4 203
kJ Total 1937 1662 1552 1612
Score / W 0.632 0.731 0.546 0.534
Score per Thread 2.09 1.86 1.99 1.94
kJ per Thread 24.21 20.78 27.72 28.78
                 
503.bwaves_r 358 247 357 204 324 205 249 188
507.cactuBSSN_r 182 268 163 204 127 204 116 204
508.namd_r 194 268 164 204 122 204 127 205
510.parest_r 102 267 99 204 85 204 63 191
511.povray_r 242 269 203 203 157 204 152 205
519.lbm_r 38 236 38 204 34 199 26 173
526.blender_r 234 268 201 204 153 204 143 204
527.cam4_r 244 268 220 204 173 204 161 204
538.imagick_r 284 266 249 204 175 204 193 205
544.nab_r 177 269 151 204 109 204 109 205
549.fotonik3d_r 110 244 110 204 99 201 78 154
554.roms_r 78 261 78 204 68 205 50 173
SPECfp2017 est. 160.7 255 147.4 204 118.7 205 104.8 184
kJ Total 3877 3258 2714 2958
Score / W 0.631 0.722 0.546 0.570
Score per Thread 2.01 1.84 2.12 1.87
kJ per Thread 48.47 40.73 48.46 52.82

Starting off with the new flagship CPU, the Xeon 8380 indeed has little trouble to significantly outperform the Xeon 8280 by 54% in both integer and floating-point SPEC suites. This comes as no surprise as the new SKU is also using a higher TDP.

Reducing the Xeon 8380 to 205W, we’re looking at least at a performance comparison at a supposed ISO-power comparison point. Here, the Xeon 8380 again outperforms the 8280 by 40-43%. The actual measured perf/W falls in at +37% for the integer suite and +27% for the FP suite.

As per-thread performance is roughly similar between the two parts here, we can also do an energy per workload comparison, with the Ice Lake SP SKU using -27 to -23% less energy to complete the same task.

Looking at the Xeon 6330 at its default settings, the figures are quite less impressive. At +2.8 and +13.2%, the new design is posting rather lack-lustre performance boosts. The power efficiency and energy consumption figures are also extremely close to that of the 8280.

It’s to be noted, that Intel also has the Xeon 6348 in its line-up which is a 28C part as well, but with a 235W TDP. The results of the 6330 really aren’t too fantastic, even if it’s a weakly binned SKU that comes at a much cheaper price than its predecessor, meaning there’s a possible wide range in silicon quality between the new Ice Lake SKUs, indicating that a badly binned Ice Lake SKU isn’t notably better than a well binned Cascade Lake part.

Topology, Memory Subsystem & Latency SPEC - Multi-Threaded Performance
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  • Gondalf - Wednesday, April 7, 2021 - link

    Depends on workload. If you need of a massive per core bandwidth, there is only a street: Intel.
    If you need of very low cache latency, there is only a street: Intel.
    Moreover consider that actually AMD is selling a small number of 64 cores SKUs, the focus of the market is on 32 cores parts. So again in this arena Intel is absolutely the best for bandwidth, latencies and idle power (AMD main defect).
    Not much is changed, Amd is best for many cores apps, Intel for medium/low number of cores apps.
    Something will change at the end of this year.
  • SarahKerrigan - Tuesday, April 6, 2021 - link

    So the 8380 number is being used for both Ice-SP and Cooper-SP, which are totally unrelated designs, on different platforms, with different microarchitectures?

    Well, that's not confusing at all.
  • Drumsticks - Tuesday, April 6, 2021 - link

    I thought surely it must have been a typo or you were confused, but yes indeed, you can find the 40 core 8380 right next to the 28 core 14nm 8380HL.

    Intel's naming has never been stellar but this is a new level.
  • jeremyshaw - Tuesday, April 6, 2021 - link

    Cooper Lake probably existed about as much as Cannon Lake. Intel still doesn't want to acknowledge their failures.

    This totally bodes well. /s
  • schujj07 - Tuesday, April 6, 2021 - link

    You can actually buy Cooper Lake 4p servers.
  • fallaha56 - Tuesday, April 6, 2021 - link

    well you won't be buying 38-40 core Ice Lake ones

    phantom parts, yield are awfuls. and as we saw, on the lower core count parts, so is performance
  • fallaha56 - Tuesday, April 6, 2021 - link

    https://semiaccurate.com/2021/04/06/intels-ice-lak...
  • 29a - Wednesday, April 7, 2021 - link

    Are you getting paid for every semiaccurate link you post?
  • eastcoast_pete - Tuesday, April 6, 2021 - link

    Maybe that's what Intel meant with "improved cryptographic performance"; nobody can make any sense out of their naming scheme (: . Cryptic indeed!
  • amootpoint - Tuesday, April 6, 2021 - link

    It seems like a great wholistic platform. I must say, well done Intel.

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