CPU Tests: SPEC ST Performance on P-Cores & E-Cores

SPEC2017 is a series of standardized tests used to probe the overall performance between different systems, different architectures, different microarchitectures, and setups. The code has to be compiled, and then the results can be submitted to an online database for comparison. It covers a range of integer and floating point workloads, and can be very optimized for each CPU, so it is important to check how the benchmarks are being compiled and run.

For compilers, we use LLVM both for C/C++ and Fortan tests, and for Fortran we’re using the Flang compiler. The rationale of using LLVM over GCC is better cross-platform comparisons to platforms that have only have LLVM support and future articles where we’ll investigate this aspect more. We’re not considering closed-sourced compilers such as MSVC or ICC.

clang version 10.0.0
clang version 7.0.1 (ssh://git@github.com/flang-compiler/flang-driver.git
 24bd54da5c41af04838bbe7b68f830840d47fc03)

-Ofast -fomit-frame-pointer
-march=x86-64
-mtune=core-avx2
-mfma -mavx -mavx2

Our compiler flags are straightforward, with basic –Ofast and relevant ISA switches to allow for AVX2 instructions. We decided to build our SPEC binaries on AVX2, which puts a limit on Haswell as how old we can go before the testing will fall over. This also means we don’t have AVX512 binaries, primarily because in order to get the best performance, the AVX-512 intrinsic should be packed by a proper expert, as with our AVX-512 benchmark. All of the major vendors, AMD, Intel, and Arm, all support the way in which we are testing SPEC.

To note, the requirements for the SPEC licence state that any benchmark results from SPEC have to be labeled ‘estimated’ until they are verified on the SPEC website as a meaningful representation of the expected performance. This is most often done by the big companies and OEMs to showcase performance to customers, however is quite over the top for what we do as reviewers.

For Alder Lake, we start off with a comparison of the Golden Cove cores, both in DDR5 as well as DDR4 variants. We’re pitting them as direct comparison against Rocket Lake’s Cypress Cove cores, as well as AMD’s Zen3.

SPECint2017 Rate-1 Estimated Scores

Starting off in SPECint2017, the first thing I’d say is that for single-thread workloads, it seems that DDR5 doesn’t showcase any major improvements over DDR4. The biggest increase for the Golden Cove cores are in 520.omnetpp_r at 9.2% - the workload is defined by sparse memory accessing in a parallel way, so DDR5’s doubled up channel count here is likely what’s affecting the test the most.

Comparing the DDR5 results against RKL’s WLC cores, ADL’s GLC showcases some large advantages in several workloads: 24% in perlbench, +29% in omnetpp, +21% in xalancbmk, and +26% in exchange2 – all of the workloads here are likely boosted by the new core’s larger out of order window which has grown to up to 512 instructions. Perlbench is more heavily instruction pressure biased, at least compared to other workloads in the suite, so the new 6-wide decoder also likely is a big reason we see such a large increase.

The smallest increases are in mcf, which is more pure memory latency bound, and deepsjeng and leela, the latter which is particularly branch mispredict heavy. Whilst Golden Cove improves its branch predictors, the core also had to add an additional cycle of misprediction penalty, so the relative smaller increases here make sense with that as a context.

SPECfp2017 Rate-1 Estimated Scores

In the FP suite, the DDR5 results have a few larger outliers compared to the DDR4 set, bwaves and fotonik3d showcase +15% and +17% just due to the memory change, which is no surprise given both workloads extremely heavy memory bandwidth characteristic.

Compared to RKL, ADL showcases also some very large gains in some of the workloads, +33% in cactuBBSN, +24% in povray. The latter is a surprise to me as it should be a more execution-bound workload, so maybe the new added FADD units of the cores are coming into play here.

We’ve had not too much time to test out the Gracemont cores in isolation, but we are able to showcase some results. This set here is done on native Linux rather than WSL due to affinity issues on Windows, the results are within margin of error between the platforms, however there are a few % points outliers on the FP suite. Still, comparing the P to E-cores are in apples-to-apples conditions in these set of graphs:

SPECint2017 Rate-1 Estimated Scores (P vs E-cores) SPECfp2017 Rate-1 Estimated Scores (P vs E-cores)

When Intel mentioned that the Gracemont E-cores of Alder Lake were matching the ST performance of the original Skylake, Intel was very much correct in that description. Unlike what we consider “little” cores in a normal big.LITTLE setup, the E-cores of Alder Lake are still quite performant.

In the aggregate scores, an E-core is roughly 54-64% of a P-core, however this percentage can go as high as 65-73%. Given the die size differences between the two microarchitectures, and the fact that in multi-threaded scenarios the P-cores would normally have to clock down anyway because of power limits, it’s pretty evident how Intel’s setup with efficiency and density cores allows for much higher performance within a given die size and power envelope.

In SPEC, in terms of package power, the P-cores averaged 25.3W in the integer suite and 29.2W in the FP suite, in contrast to respectively 10.7W and 11.5W for the E-cores, both under single-threaded scenarios. Idle package power ran in at 1.9W.

SPEC2017 Rate-1 Estimated Total

Alder Lake and the Golden Cove cores are able to reclaim the single-threaded performance crown from AMD and Apple. The increases over Rocket Lake come in at +18-20%, and Intel’s advantage over AMD is now at 6.4% and 16.1% depending on the suite, maybe closer than what Intel would have liked given V-cache variants of Zen3 are just a few months away.

Again, the E-core performance of ADL is impressive, while not extraordinary ahead in the FP suite, they can match the performance of some middle-stack Zen2 CPUs from only a couple of years ago in the integer suite.

CPU Tests: Core-to-Core and Cache Latency, DDR4 vs DDR5 MLP CPU Tests: SPEC MT Performance - DDR5 Advantage
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  • mode_13h - Tuesday, November 9, 2021 - link

    Well, AMD does have V-Cache and Zen 3+ in the queue. But if you want to short them, be my guest!
  • Sivar - Monday, November 8, 2021 - link

    This is an amazingly deep, properly Anandtech review, even ignoring time constraints and the unusual difficulty of this particular launch.
    I bet Ian and Andrei will be catching up on sleep for weeks.
  • xhris4747 - Tuesday, November 9, 2021 - link

    Hi
  • ricebunny - Tuesday, November 9, 2021 - link

    It’s disappointing that Anandtech continues to use suboptimal compilers for their platforms. Intel’s Compiler classic demonstrated 41% better performance than Clang 12.0.0 in the SPECrate 2017 Floating Point suite.
  • mode_13h - Wednesday, November 10, 2021 - link

    I think it's fair, though. Most workloads people run aren't built with vendor-supplied compilers, they use industry standards of gcc, clang, or msvc. And the point of benchmarks it to give you an idea of what the typical user experience would be.
  • ricebunny - Wednesday, November 10, 2021 - link

    But are they not compiling the code for the M1 series chips with a vendor supplied compiler?

    Second, almost all benchmarks in SPECrate 2017 Floating Point are scientific codes, half of which are in Fortran. That’s exactly the target domain of the Intel compiler. I admit, I am out of date with the HPC developments, but back when I was still in the game icc was the most commonly used compiler.
  • mode_13h - Thursday, November 11, 2021 - link

    > are they not compiling the code for the M1 series chips with a vendor supplied compiler?

    It's just a slightly newer version of LLVM than what you'd get on Linux.

    > almost all benchmarks in SPECrate 2017 Floating Point are scientific codes,

    3 are rendering, animation, and image processing. Some of the others could fall more in the category of engineering than scientific, but whatever.

    > half of which are in Fortran.

    Only 3 are pure fortran. Another 4 are some mixture, but we don't know the relative amounts. They could literally link in BLAS or some FFT code for some trivial setup computation, and that would count as including fortran.

    https://www.spec.org/cpu2017/Docs/index.html#intra...

    BTW, you conveniently ignored how only one of the SPECrate 2017 int tests is fortran.
  • mode_13h - Thursday, November 11, 2021 - link

    Oops, I accidentally counted one test that's only SPECspeed.

    So, in SPECrate 2017 fp:

    3 are fortran
    3 are fortran & C/C++
    7 are only C/C++
  • ricebunny - Thursday, November 11, 2021 - link

    Yes, I made the same mistake when counting.

    Without knowing what the Fortran code in the mixed code represents I would not discard it as irrelevant: those tests could very well spend a majority of their time executing Fortran.

    As for the int tests, the advantage of the Intel compiler was even more pronounced: almost 50% over Clang. IMO this is too significant to ignore.

    If I ran these tests, I would provide results from multiple compilers. I would also consult with the CPU vendors regarding the recommended compiler settings. Anandtech refuses to compile code with AVX512 support for non Alder Lake Intel chips, whereas Intel’s runs of SPECrate2017 enable that switch?
  • xray9 - Sunday, November 14, 2021 - link

    > At Intel’s Innovation event last week, we learned that the operating system
    > will de-emphasise any workload that is not in user focus.

    I see performance critical for audio applications which need near-real time performance.
    It's already a pain to find good working drivers that do not allocate CPU core for too long, not to block processes with near-realtime demands.
    And for performance tuning we use already the Windows option to priotize for background processes, which gives the process scheduler a higher and fix time quantum, to be able to work more efficient on processes and to lower the number of context switches.
    And now we get this hybrid design where everything becomes out of control and you can only hope and pray, that the process scheduling will not be too bad. I am not amused about that and very skeptical, that this will work out well.

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