SPECing Denver's Performance

Finally, before diving into our look at Denver in the real world on the Nexus 9, let’s take a look at a few performance considerations.

With so much of Denver’s performance riding on the DCO, starting with the DCO we have a slide from NVIDIA profiling the execution of SPECInt2000 on Denver. In it NVIDIA showcases how much time Denver spends on each type of code execution – native ARM code, the optimizer, and finally optimized code – along with an idea of the IPC they achieve on this benchmark.

What we find is that as expected, it takes a bit of time for Denver’s DCO to kick in and produce optimized native code. At the start of the benchmark execution with little optimized code to work with, Denver initially executes ARM code via its ARM decoder, taking a bit of time to find recurring code. Once it finds that recurring code Denver’s DCO kicks in – taking up CPU time itself – as the DCO begins replacing recurring code segments with optimized, native code.

In this case the amount of CPU time spent on the DCO is never too great of a percentage of time, however NVIDIA’s example has the DCO noticeably running for quite some time before it finally settles down to an imperceptible fraction of time. Initially a much larger fraction of the time is spent executing ARM code on Denver due to the time it takes for the optimizer to find recurring code and optimize it. Similarly, another spike in ARM code is found roughly mid-run, when Denver encounters new code segments that it needs to execute as ARM code before optimizing it and replacing it with native code.

Meanwhile there’s a clear hit to IPC whenever Denver is executing ARM code, with Denver’s IPC dropping below 1.0 whenever it’s executing large amounts of such code. This in a nutshell is why Denver’s DCO is so important and why Denver needs recurring code, as it’s going to achieve its best results with code it can optimize and then frequently re-use those results.

Also of note though, Denver’s IPC per slice of time never gets above 2.0, even with full optimization and significant code recurrence in effect. The specific IPC of any program is going to depend on the nature of the code, but this serves as a good example of the fact that even with a bag full of tricks in the DCO, Denver is not going to sustain anything near its theoretical maximum IPC of 7. Individual VLIW instructions may hit 7, but over any period of time if a lack of ILP in the code itself doesn’t become the bottleneck, then other issues such as VLIW density limits, cache flushes, and unavoidable memory stalls will. The important question is ultimately whether Denver’s IPC is enough of an improvement over Cortex A15/A57 to justify both the power consumption costs and the die space costs of its very wide design.

NVIDIA's example also neatly highlights the fact that due to Denver’s favoritism for code reuse, it is in a position to do very well in certain types of benchmarks. CPU benchmarks in particular are known for their extended runs of similar code to let the CPU settle and get a better sustained measurement of CPU performance, all of which plays into Denver’s hands. Which is not to say that it can’t also do well in real-world code, but in these specific situations Denver is well set to be a benchmark behemoth.

To that end, we have also run our standard copy of SPECInt2000 to profile Denver’s performance.

SPECint2000 - Estimated Scores
  K1-32 (A15) K1-64 (Denver) % Advantage
164.gzip
869
1269
46%
175.vpr
909
1312
44%
176.gcc
1617
1884
17%
181.mcf
1304
1746
34%
186.crafty
1030
1470
43%
197.parser
909
1192
31%
252.eon
1940
2342
20%
253.perlbmk
1395
1818
30%
254.gap
1486
1844
24%
255.vortex
1535
2567
67%
256.bzip2
1119
1468
31%
300.twolf
1339
1785
33%

Given Denver’s obvious affinity for benchmarks such as SPEC we won’t dwell on the results too much here. But the results do show that Denver is a very strong CPU under SPEC, and by extension under conditions where it can take advantage of significant code reuse. Similarly, because these benchmarks aren’t heavily threaded, they’re all the happier with any improvements in single-threaded performance that Denver can offer.

Coming from the K1-32 and its Cortex-A15 CPU to K1-64 and its Denver CPU, the actual gains are unsurprisingly dependent on the benchmark. The worst case scenario of 176.gcc still has Denver ahead by 17%, meanwhile the best case scenario of 255.vortex finds that Denver bests A15 by 67%, coming closer than one would expect towards doubling A15's performance entirely. The best case scenario is of course unlikely to occur in real code, though I’m not sure the same can be said for the worst case scenario. At the same time we find that there aren’t any performance regressions, which is a good start for Denver.

If nothing else it's clear that Denver is a benchmark monster. Now let's see what it can do in the real world.

The Secret of Denver: Binary Translation & Code Optimization CPU Performance
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  • mkygod - Saturday, February 7, 2015 - link

    I think so to. The 3:2 ratio is one of the things that Microsoft has gotten right with their Surface Pro devices. It's the perfect compromise IMO
  • UtilityMax - Sunday, February 8, 2015 - link

    I am a little perplexed by this comment. A typical user will be on the web 90% of time. Not only the web browser does not need to be natively designed or optimized for any screen ratio, but it also will be more usable on a 4:3 screen. So will the productivity apps. The only disappointment for me on the 4:3 screen would be with watching the widescreen videos or TV shows. Moreover, there is quite a bit of evidence than a lot of the next generation tablets will be 4:3. Samsung's next flagship tablet supposedly will be 4:3.
  • gtrenchev - Wednesday, February 4, 2015 - link

    Anandtech is becoming more and more boring last year. Sparse on reviews, short on tech comments, lacking on depth and enthusiasm. I can see Anandtech has become a just job for you guys, not the passion it was for Anand :-) And yes, his absence is definitely noticeable.

    George
  • Ian Cutress - Wednesday, February 4, 2015 - link

    Was the Denver deep-dive not sufficient enough? Always welcome for comments.
    As for timing, see Ryan's comment above.
    We've actually had a very good quarter content wise, with a full review on the front page at least four out of every five weekdays if not every weekday.
  • milkod2001 - Wednesday, February 4, 2015 - link

    Why not to post on your forum some sort of suggestion box/poll where all could say what should get reviewed first so some folks won't cry where is the review of their favorite toy :) ?
  • Impulses - Wednesday, February 4, 2015 - link

    Because they'll still cry regardless, and they can't possibly work entirely based on readers' whim, doesn't make sense logistically or nor editorially... Readers might vote on five things ahead of the rest which all fall on the same writer's lap, they won't all get reviewed before the rest, or readers might not be privy to new hardware because of NDAs or cases where Anandtech can't source something for review.
  • tuxRoller - Thursday, February 5, 2015 - link

    While I enjoyed the review, I would've loved to have seen the kind of code driven analysis that was done with Swift.
    In particular, how long does it take for dco to kick in. What is the IPC for code that NEVER gets optimized, and conversely, what is the IPC for embarrassingly instruction-wise parallel code? Since it's relying on ram to store the uops, how long does the code need to run before it breaks even with the arm decoder? Etc.
  • victorson - Wednesday, February 4, 2015 - link

    Are you guys kidding? Better late than never, but heck.. this is freaking late.
  • abufrejoval - Wednesday, February 4, 2015 - link

    Thanks for making it worth the wait!

    The in-depth analysis of Denver is uniquely Anandtech, because you can't get that anywhere else.

    And while Charly D. is very entertaining, the paywall is a bit of an impediment and I quite like again the Anand touch of trying to be as fair as possible.

    I was and remain a bit worried that there seems to be no other platform for Denver, which typically signals a deeper flaw with an SoC in the tablet and phone space.

    While I'm somewhat less worried now, that Denver might be acceptable as a SoC, the current Nexus generation is no longer attractive at these prices, even less with the way the €/$ is evolving.
  • Taneli - Wednesday, February 4, 2015 - link

    eDRAM cache à la Crystalwell would be interesting in a future Denver chip.

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