CPU Tests: Legacy and Web

In order to gather data to compare with older benchmarks, we are still keeping a number of tests under our ‘legacy’ section. This includes all the former major versions of CineBench (R15, R11.5, R10) as well as x264 HD 3.0 and the first very naïve version of 3DPM v2.1. We won’t be transferring the data over from the old testing into Bench, otherwise it would be populated with 200 CPUs with only one data point, so it will fill up as we test more CPUs like the others.

The other section here is our web tests.

Web Tests: Kraken, Octane, and Speedometer

Benchmarking using web tools is always a bit difficult. Browsers change almost daily, and the way the web is used changes even quicker. While there is some scope for advanced computational based benchmarks, most users care about responsiveness, which requires a strong back-end to work quickly to provide on the front-end. The benchmarks we chose for our web tests are essentially industry standards – at least once upon a time.

It should be noted that for each test, the browser is closed and re-opened a new with a fresh cache. We use a fixed Chromium version for our tests with the update capabilities removed to ensure consistency.

Mozilla Kraken 1.1

Kraken is a 2010 benchmark from Mozilla and does a series of JavaScript tests. These tests are a little more involved than previous tests, looking at artificial intelligence, audio manipulation, image manipulation, json parsing, and cryptographic functions. The benchmark starts with an initial download of data for the audio and imaging, and then runs through 10 times giving a timed result.

We loop through the 10-run test four times (so that’s a total of 40 runs), and average the four end-results. The result is given as time to complete the test, and we’re reaching a slow asymptotic limit with regards the highest IPC processors.

(7-1) Kraken 1.1 Web Test

Google Octane 2.0

Our second test is also JavaScript based, but uses a lot more variation of newer JS techniques, such as object-oriented programming, kernel simulation, object creation/destruction, garbage collection, array manipulations, compiler latency and code execution.

Octane was developed after the discontinuation of other tests, with the goal of being more web-like than previous tests. It has been a popular benchmark, making it an obvious target for optimizations in the JavaScript engines. Ultimately it was retired in early 2017 due to this, although it is still widely used as a tool to determine general CPU performance in a number of web tasks.

(7-2) Google Octane 2.0 Web Test

Speedometer 2: JavaScript Frameworks

Our newest web test is Speedometer 2, which is a test over a series of JavaScript frameworks to do three simple things: built a list, enable each item in the list, and remove the list. All the frameworks implement the same visual cues, but obviously apply them from different coding angles.

Our test goes through the list of frameworks, and produces a final score indicative of ‘rpm’, one of the benchmarks internal metrics.

We repeat over the benchmark for a dozen loops, taking the average of the last five.

(7-3) Speedometer 2.0 Web Test

Legacy Tests

(6-5a) x264 HD 3.0 Pass 1(6-5b) x264 HD 3.0 Pass 2

(6-4a) 3DPM v1 ST(6-4b) 3DPM v1 MT

(6-3a) CineBench R15 ST(6-3b) CineBench R15 MT

CPU Tests: Simulation CPU Tests: Synthetic
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  • Rocket_Scientist - Friday, July 16, 2021 - link

    I want to know who spends 5 grand on a processor but doesn't spend the few extra dollars to utilize all 8 memory channels!
  • Mikewind Dale - Friday, July 16, 2021 - link

    The 3955WX processor "only" costs $1,150, while each stick of 64 GB RAM costs $350.

    And I wanted to keep some empty slots in case 128 GB RDIMMs became affordable. But I didn't know that using 6 channels would cause so much performance degradation.
  • mode_13h - Saturday, July 17, 2021 - link

    > who spends 5 grand on a processor but doesn't spend
    > the few extra dollars to utilize all 8 memory channels!

    Although I tend to agree, the article did reveal some benchmarks where the additional bandwidth provides negligible benefit.
  • lmh - Tuesday, July 27, 2021 - link

    Can you share what memory bandwidth you actually measured in the 3955WX 8-channel configuration?
  • McFig - Wednesday, July 14, 2021 - link

    There’s an error in the table “AMD 32-Core Zen 2 Comparison”: The MSRPs are mixed up.
  • McFig - Wednesday, July 14, 2021 - link

    Also: “code bath”; “Undreal” (I’m guessing should be “Unreal”?); “but also the updates” (e.g. could be “but also there were significant updates”)
  • SarahKerrigan - Wednesday, July 14, 2021 - link

    I kind of like "Code Bath."
  • Threska - Wednesday, July 14, 2021 - link

    " This is part of AMD’s guaranteed supply chain process, allowing OEMs to hard lock processors into certain vendors for supply chain end-to-end security that is requested by specific customers."

    I ASSUME that's a feature a certain OS vendor can't access.

    "Only select vendors seem to have access/licenses to make WRX80 motherboards, and your main options are:"

    I've seen the Giga offered as a burn-in special with a bundled processor, making it a better deal. The Asus is nice but I have to wonder if it's worth all the features.
  • DesireeTR - Wednesday, July 14, 2021 - link

    No, It's worse. There's article about AMD Platform Secure Boot Feature (PSB) by servethehome together with Dell EMC. It basically burns permanently a public key of the OEM into the EPYC processor. It creates a guarantee that both motherboard and processor are not tampered. If you move your processor from OEM A that enabled PSB to motherboard of OEM B, AMD Secure Processor considers that as tampering and stops it working. The reverse is true.

    Some OEM are very strict (Dell EMC does this by hardware burn-in), some are less strict (HPE use
  • DesireeTR - Wednesday, July 14, 2021 - link

    HPE only locks the public key in the firmware, and perform tamper check on BIOS only). And I guess before long, all PRO processor might get the same PSB feature too.

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