Ryzen 7000 I/O Die: TSMC & Integrated Graphics at Last

We’ll start our look at the Ryzen 7000 silicon with the glue that holds the chip together: the I/O Die (IOD). Whether it’s a 7600X or 7950X – one CPU chiplet or two – every Ryzen 7000 processor gets one of AMD’s new IODs.

As with the Ryzen 3000/5000 series, the IOD is a die separate from the CPU core chiplets that hosts everything that isn’t the CPU cores or their associated L1/L2/L3 caches. By producing a 2 or 3 chiplet-based solution rather than a single monolithic die, AMD is able to put silicon that doesn’t require cutting-edge performance on a cheaper process node, while enjoying the yield advantages that come from smaller chiplets and older, more mature nodes.

And yet with that said, for the Ryzen 7000 series it’s AMD’s IOD that’s getting the biggest upgrade. Previously produced on GlobalFoundries’ 14nm/12nm process node, for Ryzen 7000 the IOD has made the leap to TSMC. The new IOD is made on TSMC’s 6nm process, a generation behind the 5nm node used for the CPU chiplets themselves, but a generation (and then-some) ahead of GlobalFoundries’ smallest node.

With AMD no longer tightly bound to GloFo with wafer share agreement exclusivity requirements, AMD is now free to produce chips like the IOD where they see fit. And with AMD also doing very well as a company in the last few years, they do not need to produce IODs at GloFo to meet their purchase requirements with the fab.

The jump to TSMC 6nm brings several advantages to AMD’s central chiplet. The much smaller process node allows for significantly more transistors – 3.4B on a 122m2 die, 63% more than before – which AMD can invest in new features such as integrated graphics. As well, the more efficient process node brings down the power requirements of the IOD, especially in near-idle situations, though AMD is relying on a lot more than process nodes here.

In terms of functionality, the IOD first and foremost is responsible for the CPU-side implementation of all the new features of the AM5 platform. So PCIe 5.0 root complexes, DDR5 memory support, updated display I/O, and more are implemented here. Relative to the Ryzen 3000/5000 IOD then, there is almost nothing here that AMD hasn’t touched in some function; even the USB controllers and infinity fabric have been altered for this generation of processors.

Ryzen 6000 Mobile’s Legacy: Power Control and Pluton

Outside of the obvious gains from moving to a smaller process node, the Ryzen 7000 IOD has also given AMD a chance to implement everything they’ve learned in the past 3 years about power control and power optimizations from the Ryzen mobile lineup. Since the previous-generation IOD was launched for the Ryzen 3000 family in 2019, AMD has launched the Ryzen 6000 Mobile CPU, a monolithic die design that went all-out on power efficiency improvements in a bid to catch up to Intel. Ryzen 6000 Mobile introduced power features such as SVI3, which have since been ported to the Ryzen 7000 design, and principally show up as parts of the IOD.

This was especially easy for AMD as the IOD is made on the same 6nm process as the Ryzen 6000 Mobile chips. Which means that the new IOD has been able to implement many of the same power gating, power binning, deep sleep modes, clock gating, and power state features that were first introduced for mobile. Which is to say that AMD has put a lot of hard work into keeping the IOD from working hard.

The Ryzen 7000 also inherits many of the basic security features of the Ryzen 6000 Mobile platform. AMD is still using their own Arm-based security processor within the IOD. And the new chip is compliant with Microsoft’s Pluton initiative as well – with all the mixed responses that will undoubtedly come from that.

Ryzen 7000 Becomes Whole: Integrated Graphics At Last

Of the additional 1.31B transistors in AMD’s new IOD, the single biggest spend against that budget comes from the long-awaited inclusion of integrated graphics on high-end Ryzen desktop parts. Up to this point, AMD’s high-end consumer Ryzen processors have not included integrated graphics; both the early monolithic parts and later chiplet-style parts have forgone them for cost and integration reasons. But now with AMD’s modern RDNA 2 graphics architecture and TSMC fabrication process, AMD has finally seen the (ray traced) light, and is building a small GPU block into the IOD to offer integrated graphics throughout the Ryzen 7000 product stack.

To be sure, this iGPU is not a very powerful one – and it’s not meant to be. With just 2 CUs (technically a single RDNA 2 dual compute unit), it offers one-sixth the number of CUs on AMD’s top-end Ryzen Mobile APUs, or in the bottom-of-the-stack discrete Radeon RX 6400. So this is not a configuration meant to replace AMD’s traditional APUs in laptop or desktop scenarios. None the less, it is a full implementation of the RDNA 2 architecture – ray tracing and all – in a very low performance configuration.

AMD GPU Specificaiton Comparison
  AMD Radeon Graphics
(Raphael)
AMD Radeon 680M
(Rembrandt)
AMD Radeon RX 6400
Stream Processors 128
(2 CUs)
768
(12 CUs)
768
(12 CUs)
Boost Clock 2200MHz 2400MHz 2321MHz
Peak Throughput (FP32) 0.56 TFLOPS 3.7 TFLOPS 3.6 TFLOPS
Memory Clock DDR5-5200 LPDDR5-6400 16 Gbps GDDR6
Memory Bus Width 128-bit 128-bit 64-bit
Infinity Cache N/A N/A 16MB
Manufacturing Process TSMC N6 TSMC N6 TSMC N6
Transistor Count N/A N/A 5.4B
Architecture RDNA2 RDNA2 RDNA2
GPU Raphael Integrated Rembrandt Integrated Navi 24

The idea behind including an iGPU here is to offer a basic implementation of modern graphics across the entire Ryzen 7000 lineup. Even though it’s not very fast, 2 CUs running at up to 2.2GHz is going to be fast enough for desktop work – and maybe even some very light gaming. This makes the high-end Ryzen chips suitable for desktop work and inclusion in OEM desktop systems without a discrete GPU, a market segment that AMD was previously locked out of and Intel enjoyed free reign. And even for users who are bringing their own GPU, an integrated GPU makes troubleshooting all the easier, as now it doesn’t require a separate video card to merely boot a system.

Besides enabling basic pixel processing, the other major function of the Ryzen 7000 iGPU is to enable all of the video decoding and video output functionality expected from a modern GPU. As this part is derived from the integrated GPU that when into Ryzen 6000 Mobile (Rembrandt), it comes with a very familiar feature set. That includes AV1, HEVC, and H.264 video decoding, as well as HEVC and H.264 video encoding.  And, as AMD is keen to point out, these video encode/decode blocks remain accessible even with a discrete GPU in play; so unless a user outright disables the iGPU, every Ryzen 7000 system will have access to a modern suite of video encode and decode features.

Meanwhile on the display controller side of matters, this is the block that’s enabling Ryzen 7000 CPUs to drive up to 4 4K@60Hz displays. The iGPU display controllers can drive HDMI 2.1 up to its maximum 48Gbps data rate, or it can drive a DisplayPort 2.0 output at up to the UHBR10 data rate (a feature not even found on NVIDIA’s forthcoming RTX 40 series cards). And as mentioned previously when talking about motherboards and chipsets, motherboard vendors will have the option of exposing these DP outputs either via USB-C alt mode, or by implementing fixed DisplayPorts. All of which, in turn, can be used as active display outputs even if a discrete video card is installed, via AMD’s new hybrid graphics mode.

All told, AMD is taking a similar tack as Intel here with their desktop CPUs. Most (but not all) Intel desktop parts contain a basic UHD-class integrated Xe-LP GPU, which Intel does for many of the same reasons as AMD now is. AMD has a leg-up on Intel in as much as they offer a newer architecture and features to much, such as AV1 decoding. But we’ll have to see where performance lands; 2 Radeon CUs is low enough that these parts may not even catch up to Intel’s 32 EU integrated graphics.

AMD Infinity Fabric: Faster Flowing, Narrower Going

The last major functional update to come with AMD new IOD is the Infinity Fabric, AMD’s die-to-die interconnect. On the chiplet-based Ryzen desktop parts, IF is used to provide a low-latency connection between the IOD and the CPU core chiplet(s) on the package.

For the Ryzen 7000 series, AMD has done some further engineering work to reduce the power costs of the IF links, and thus improve the overall power efficiency of the link and reduce the data movement power penalty for using a chiplet-based approach. The most significant thing here is that AMD has doubled the IF link frequency, but cut the physical width of the IF link in half. As a result, Ryzen 7000’s IF links offer the same bandwidth as on Ryzen 5000,

According to AMD, this refactoring is because AMD’s engineers found that, contrary to conventional wisdom, they could save power running a narrower IF link at a higher frequency. Which is to say that, even though higher frequencies are normally power prohibitive, in the case of IF it’s just powering the physical links themselves which is the most expensive part. Part of that shift, in turn, comes from the fact that the newer process nodes have allowed AMD to run the IF link at a lower voltage,

Finally, further reducing AMD’s power consumption here, the IF links on the Ryzen 7000 now support multiple power states, versus the binary on/off states of the IF links on Ryzen 5000 and earlier. This gives AMD a nice middle ground to save power in lighter load situations, by being able to use intermediate states rather than running at full-power just to have an IF link active.

And while this leaves AMD with an obvious (if more power-hungry) route to take for more IF bandwidth in the future should they need it, for now the company intends to stay pat. According to AMD’s engineers, the amount of bandwidth supplied by the Ryzen 7000 IF links, though virtually identical to the amount of bandwidth on the Ryzen 5000 links, is still enough to meet AMD’s die-to-die bandwidth needs – even with extra memory bandwidth afforded by the switch to DDR5.

DDR5 & AMD EXPO Memory: Memory Overclocking, AMD's Way Zen 4 Architecture: Power Efficiency, Performance, & New Instructions
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  • phoenix_rizzen - Monday, September 26, 2022 - link

    The Spec graphs are hard to read as you don't have the CPUs listed in the correct order. You should switch dark blue to be 5950X and light blue to be 3950X. Right now you have the CPUs (graphs) listed as:

    Intel
    7950X
    3950X
    5950X

    It really should be:
    Intel
    7950X
    5950X
    3950X

    That would make it a lot easier to see the generational improvements. Sort things logically, numerically. :)
    Reply
  • Otritus - Monday, September 26, 2022 - link

    @Ryan Smith please do this. I was also having difficulty reading the Spec graph. Reply
  • Gavin Bonshor - Monday, September 26, 2022 - link

    I apologize for doing it this way. I promise I'll sort it in the morning (UK based) Reply
  • yeeeeman - Monday, September 26, 2022 - link

    Retaking the high end for 1 month. Reply
  • yeeeeman - Monday, September 26, 2022 - link

    TBH, what I am most excited about is the zen 4 laptop parts, like the phoenix apu, with 8 zen 4 cores, rdna 3 igpu, lpddr5, 4nm cpu, 5nm gpu, that should bring some clear improvements over the 4000 series ryzen which are still amazingly good. 5000 and 6000 series haven't brought much improvements over the 4000 series, like my 4800H, so I am curious to see what the 7000 series will bring. Already dreaming about a fully metal body, slim laptop, 14-16 inch, OLED, 90Hz minimum, laminated screen, preferably touch and 360 hinge, 1.5kg top. that will be nice. Reply
  • abufrejoval - Wednesday, September 28, 2022 - link

    Since you're hinting that Intel will change things, there is much less of a chance for Intel to catch up in the mobile sector on 10nm.

    For the laptops I see a different story at almost every five Watts of permissible power for the CPUside of things. But much less change between the 4000-7000 Zen generations at the same energy settings.

    Any hopes for a more-than-casual gaming iGPU can't but fail, because AMD can't overcome the DRAM bandwidth limitations, unless they were to start with stuff like extra channels of RAM on the die carrier like Apple (or HBM).

    And that basically leaves 13% of IPC improvements, some efficiency gains but much less clock gains, because that's mostly additional Wattage on the desktop parts, not available on battery.

    I haven't tried the 6800U yet, but even if it were to be 100% better than my 5800U, that's still too slow a GPU to drive my Lenovo Yoga Slim 7 13ACN notebook's 2560x1600 display full throttle. Even 4x speed won't change that, it just takes a 250 Watt GPU to drive that resolution more like 350 Watts for 4k.

    I just bought a nice 3k 90Hz OLED 5825U based 14" notebook (Asus Zenbook 14) for one of my sons, full metal slim but without touch for less than €1000 including taxes and he's completely stunned by the combination of display brightness (he tends to use it outside) and battery life.

    As long as you think of it as a 2D machine that will do fine display Google Earth in 3D, you'll be happy. If you try to turn it into a gaming laptop it's outright grief or severe compromises.

    And I just don't see how a dGPU on an APU makes much sense, because you just purchase capabilities twice without the ability to combine them in something that actually works. Those hybrid approaches were only ever good in theory.
    Reply
  • Makaveli - Monday, September 26, 2022 - link

    "I have a 1440p 144Hz monitor and I play at 1080p just because that's what I'm used to."

    *Insert ryan reynolds meme

    Buy why?
    Reply
  • Gavin Bonshor - Monday, September 26, 2022 - link

    Because I fear that if I drop below 144 Hz in any title, that my life wouldn't be able to cope. Maybe I just need to upgrade from an RX 5700 XT? Reply
  • Makaveli - Tuesday, September 27, 2022 - link

    Ah yes its time.

    Go RDNA3
    Reply
  • kryn5 - Monday, September 26, 2022 - link

    "Despite modern-day graphics cards, especially the flagships, now at the level where 1440p and 4K gaming is viable, 1080p is still a very popular resolution to play games at; I have a 1440p 144Hz monitor and I play at 1080p just because that's what I'm used to."

    I... what?
    Reply

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