Performance

When I sat down with the 2X at CES, naturally the first thing we did was run our usual suite of benchmarking tools on the phone. The phone was running Android 2.2.1 then, and even though the numbers were good, LG hadn’t quite finalized the software and didn’t think those numbers were representative. We didn’t publish, but knew that performance was good.

Obviously now we don’t have such limitations, and won’t keep you waiting any longer to see how Tegra 2 compares to other phones we’ve benchmarked already. We’ve already talked about performance a bit in our initial preview from back when we got the 2X, but there’s obviously a lot more we have now.

Before we start that discussion however, we need to talk about multithreading in Android. Android itself already is multithreaded natively, in fact, that’s part of delivering speedy UI. The idea is to render the UI using one thread and distribute slow tasks into a background threads as necessary. In the best case multithreaded scenario on Android, the main thread communicates to child threads using a handler class, and hums along until they come back with results and messages. It’s nothing new from a UI perspective—keep the thread drawing the screen active and speedy while longer processes run in the background. The even better part is that multiprocessor smartphones can immediately take advantage of multiple cores and distribute threads appropriately with Android. That said, Android 3.x (Honeycomb) brings a much tighter focus on multithreading and bringing things like garbage collecting off of the first CPU and onto the second. In case you haven't figured it out by now, Android releases generally pair with and are tailored to a specific SoC. If you had to assign those, it'd look something like this: 2.0-2.1—TI OMAP3, 2.2—Qualcomm Snapdragon, 2.3—Samsung Hummingbird, 3.0—Tegra 2.

Back to the point however, the same caveats we saw with multithreading on the PC apply in the mobile space. Applications need to be developed with the expressed intent of being multithreaded to feel faster. The big question on everyone's mind is whether Android 2.2.x can take advantage of those multiple cores. Turns out, the answer is yes.

First off, we can check that Android 2.2.1 on the 2X is indeed seeing the two Cortex-A9 cores by checking dmesg, which thankfully is quite easy to do over adb shell after a fresh boot. Sure enough, inside we can see two cores being brought up during boot by the kernel:

<4>[  118.962880] CPU1: Booted secondary processor
<6>[  118.962989] Brought up 2 CPUs
<6>[  118.963003] SMP: Total of 2 processors activated (3997.69 BogoMIPS).
<7>[  118.963025] CPU0 attaching sched-domain:
<7>[  118.963036]  domain 0: span 0-1 level CPU
<7>[  118.963046]   groups: 0 1
<7>[  118.963063] CPU1 attaching sched-domain:
<7>[  118.963072]  domain 0: span 0-1 level CPU
<7>[  118.963079]   groups: 1 0
<6>[  118.986650] regulator: core version 0.5

The 2X runs the same 2.6.32.9 linux kernel common to all of Android 2.2.x, but in a different mode. Check out the first line of dmesg from the Nexus One:

<5>[ 0.000000] Linux version 2.6.32.9-27240-gbca5320 (android-build@apa26.mtv.corp.google.com) (gcc version 4.4.0 (GCC) ) #1 PREEMPT Tue Aug 10 16:42:38 PDT 2010

Compare that to the 2X:

<5>[ 0.000000] Linux version 2.6.32.9 (sp9pm_9@sp9pm2pl3) (gcc version 4.4.0 (GCC) ) #1 SMP PREEMPT Sun Jan 16 20:58:43 KST 2011

The major difference is the inclusion of “SMP” which shows definitively that Symmetric Multi-Processor support is enabled on the kernel, which means the entire platform can use both CPUs. PREEMPT of course shows that kernel preemption is enabled, which both have turned on. Again, having a kernel that supports multithreading isn’t going to magically make everything faster, but it lets applications with multiple threads automatically spread them out across multiple cores.

Though there are task managers on Android, seeing how many threads a given process has running isn’t quite as easy as it is on the desktop, however there still are ways of gauging multithreading. The two tools we have are both checking “dumpsys cpuinfo” from over adb shell, and simply looking at the historical CPU use reported in a monitoring program we use called System Panel which likely looks at the same thing.

The other interesting gem we can glean from the dmesg output are the clocks NVIDIA has set for most of the interesting bits of Tegra 2 in the 2X. There’s a section of output during boot which looks like the following:

<4>[  119.026337] ADJUSTED CLOCKS:
<4>[  119.026354] MC clock is set to 300000 KHz
<4>[  119.026365] EMC clock is set to 600000 KHz (DDR clock is at 300000 KHz)
<4>[  119.026373] PLLX0 clock is set to 1000000 KHz
<4>[  119.026379] PLLC0 clock is set to 600000 KHz
<4>[  119.026385] CPU clock is set to 1000000 KHz
<4>[  119.026391] System and AVP clock is set to 240000 KHz
<4>[  119.026400] GraphicsHost clock is set to 100000 KHz
<4>[  119.026408] 3D clock is set to 100000 KHz
<4>[  119.026415] 2D clock is set to 100000 KHz
<4>[  119.026423] Epp clock is set to 100000 KHz
<4>[  119.026430] Mpe clock is set to 100000 KHz
<4>[  119.026436] Vde clock is set to 240000 KHz

We can see the CPU set to 1 GHz, but the interesting bits are that LPDDR2 runs at 300 MHz (thus with DDR we get to 600 MHz), and the GPU is clocked at a relatively conservative 100 MHz, compared to the majority of PowerVR GPUs which run somewhere around 200 MHz. It turns out that AP20H lets the GPU clock up to 300 MHz under load as we'll discuss later. The other clocks are a bit more mysterious, Vde could be the Video Decode Engine, Mpe could be Media Processing Engine (which is odd since Tegra 2 uses the A9 FPU instead of MPE), the others are even less clear.

The other interesting bit is how RAM is allocated on the 2X—there’s 512 MB of it, of which 384 MB is accessible by applications and Android. 128 MB is dedicated entirely to the GPU. You can pull that directly out of some other dmesg trickery as well:

mem=383M@0M nvmem=128M@384M

The first 384 are for general RAM, the remaining 128 MB is NVIDIA memory which we can only assume is dedicated entirely to the GPU.

The Partners and the Landscape Performance: Tegra 2 Benchmarked
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  • dendysutrisna - Saturday, August 6, 2011 - link

    Very nice article ... and I'm just a layman about this kind of information technology. But maybe someday I should know about complicated things like the above. I can only make the review at a glance (and maybe subjective, try looking at this page: http://www.bestdealscomputers.net) on products that use chips, such as NVIDIA, on a tablet computers.
    Move on .....
  • dendysutrisna - Saturday, August 6, 2011 - link

    Sory I mean at here: http://www.bestdealscomputers.net
  • dendysutrisna - Saturday, August 6, 2011 - link

    So Smartphone can do all that can be done of a tablet computer? The only restriction the size of the screen just ... look at the specifications on the following pages ... http://www.bestdealscomputers.net/tablets/motorola...
    Wow ....
  • mohamedbhimji - Tuesday, September 13, 2011 - link

    An interesting story, I recently purchased a HTC Panache (aka MyTouch 4G) and was really disappointed by the battery life when compared to my wifes iPhone, my iPad and my work BlackBerry Torch - but looking at the stats here it appears that it's about average when it comes to Android devices and other phones.

    I am still looking at getting a higher capacity battery.
  • sarah sm. - Tuesday, October 4, 2011 - link

    Optimus 2X uses Duel Core so the speed is very fast. When playing a game with my friend, Optimus 2X loads faster than his smartphone. If users with an LG smartphone want to download various apps or games, I recommend to visit uk.lgworld.com

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