Compute

Shifting gears, we have our look at compute performance.

As we outlined earlier, GTX Titan X is not the same kind of compute powerhouse that the original GTX Titan was. Make no mistake, at single precision (FP32) compute tasks it is still a very potent card, which for consumer level workloads is generally all that will matter. But for pro-level double precision (FP64) workloads the new Titan lacks the high FP64 performance of the old one.

Starting us off for our look at compute is LuxMark3.0, the latest version of the official benchmark of LuxRender 2.0. LuxRender’s GPU-accelerated rendering mode is an OpenCL based ray tracer that forms a part of the larger LuxRender suite. Ray tracing has become a stronghold for GPUs in recent years as ray tracing maps well to GPU pipelines, allowing artists to render scenes much more quickly than with CPUs alone.

Compute: LuxMark 3.0 - Hotel

While in LuxMark 2.0 AMD and NVIDIA were fairly close post-Maxwell, the recently released LuxMark 3.0 finds NVIDIA trailing AMD once more. While GTX Titan X sees a better than average 41% performance increase over the GTX 980 (owing to its ability to stay at its max boost clock on this benchmark) it’s not enough to dethrone the Radeon R9 290X. Even though GTX Titan X packs a lot of performance on paper, and can more than deliver it in graphics workloads, as we can see compute workloads are still highly variable.

For our second set of compute benchmarks we have CompuBench 1.5, the successor to CLBenchmark. CompuBench offers a wide array of different practical compute workloads, and we’ve decided to focus on face detection, optical flow modeling, and particle simulations.

Compute: CompuBench 1.5 - Face Detection

Compute: CompuBench 1.5 - Optical Flow

Compute: CompuBench 1.5 - Particle Simulation 64K

Although GTX Titan X struggled at LuxMark, the same cannot be said for CompuBench. Though the lead varies with the specific sub-benchmark, in every case the latest Titan comes out on top. Face detection in particular shows some massive gains, with GTX Titan X more than doubling the GK110 based GTX 780 Ti's performance.

Our 3rd compute benchmark is Sony Vegas Pro 13, an OpenGL and OpenCL video editing and authoring package. Vegas can use GPUs in a few different ways, the primary uses being to accelerate the video effects and compositing process itself, and in the video encoding step. With video encoding being increasingly offloaded to dedicated DSPs these days we’re focusing on the editing and compositing process, rendering to a low CPU overhead format (XDCAM EX). This specific test comes from Sony, and measures how long it takes to render a video.

Compute: Sony Vegas Pro 13 Video Render

Traditionally a benchmark that favors AMD, GTX Titan X closes the gap some. But it's still not enough to surpass the R9 290X.

Moving on, our 4th compute benchmark is FAHBench, the official Folding @ Home benchmark. Folding @ Home is the popular Stanford-backed research and distributed computing initiative that has work distributed to millions of volunteer computers over the internet, each of which is responsible for a tiny slice of a protein folding simulation. FAHBench can test both single precision and double precision floating point performance, with single precision being the most useful metric for most consumer cards due to their low double precision performance. Each precision has two modes, explicit and implicit, the difference being whether water atoms are included in the simulation, which adds quite a bit of work and overhead. This is another OpenCL test, utilizing the OpenCL path for FAHCore 17.

Compute: Folding @ Home: Explicit, Single Precision

Compute: Folding @ Home: Implicit, Single Precision

Folding @ Home’s single precision tests reiterate just how powerful GTX Titan X can be at FP32 workloads, even if it’s ostensibly a graphics GPU. With a 50-75% lead over the GTX 780 Ti, the GTX Titan X showcases some of the remarkable efficiency improvements that the Maxwell GPU architecture can offer in compute scenarios, and in the process shoots well past the AMD Radeon cards.

Compute: Folding @ Home: Explicit, Double Precision

On the other hand with a native FP64 rate of 1/32, the GTX Titan X flounders at double precision. There is no better example of just how much the GTX Titan X and the original GTX Titan differ in their FP64 capabilities than this graph; the GTX Titan X can’t beat the GTX 580, never mind the chart-topping original GTX Titan. FP64 users looking for an entry level FP64 card would be well advised to stick with the GTX Titan Black for now. The new Titan is not the prosumer compute card that was the old Titan.

Wrapping things up, our final compute benchmark is an in-house project developed by our very own Dr. Ian Cutress. SystemCompute is our first C++ AMP benchmark, utilizing Microsoft’s simple C++ extensions to allow the easy use of GPU computing in C++ programs. SystemCompute in turn is a collection of benchmarks for several different fundamental compute algorithms, with the final score represented in points. DirectCompute is the compute backend for C++ AMP on Windows, so this forms our other DirectCompute test.

Compute: SystemCompute v0.5.7.2 C++ AMP Benchmark

With the GTX 980 already performing well here, the GTX Titan X takes it home, improving on the GTX 980 by 31%. Whereas GTX 980 could only hold even with the Radeon R9 290X, the GTX Titan X takes a clear lead.

Overall then the new GTX Titan X can still be a force to be reckoned with in compute scenarios, but only when the workloads are FP32. Users accustomed to the original GTX Titan’s FP64 performance on the other hand will find that this is a very different card, one that doesn’t live up to the same standards.

Synthetics Power, Temperature, & Noise
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  • garry355 - Tuesday, March 17, 2015 - link

    After some extensive tests, it turns out this video card has 11,5GB VRAM.
    Consumers beware!
  • H3ld3r - Tuesday, March 17, 2015 - link

    Does anyone have an idea how much profit margin/ manufacturing costs/ yields nvidia is making?
  • madwolfa - Wednesday, March 18, 2015 - link

    With 28mm process being so mature, I'd think the yields are pretty good...
  • deeps6x - Tuesday, March 17, 2015 - link

    Despite their ability to release the 980Ti at the same time as the Titan ex, we know they will try to milk the rich gamers as long as possible first. I just hope the Ti gets releases no more than 4 weeks from now and drives the price of the 980 down into mainstream levels.

    I'm in Canada right now and the cheapest GTX 970 I can find is $390 and the cheapest R9 290x is $340. GTX 980 is $660 for the cheapest one. (79 cent US buck)

    If Nvidia doesn't come out with reasonable pricing for it's mid-range and high-end cards, they WILL start to lose market share to AMD. Dammit.
  • Yojimbo - Wednesday, March 18, 2015 - link

    Ideally they want to rely on using chips that couldn't perform well enough to reach the Titan bin for the 980Ti, otherwise they are wasting the potential of those chips. That means making and selling enough Titans and Quadros to produce a large enough supply of the lower-binned chips. So unless they are having yield problems, it makes sense they come out with products based on the fully-enabled chip first and then begin to introduce lower-specified chips later.

    As far as losing market share, they are well aware of how things are selling, and if people aren't choosing to buy cards with their chips over the competition's at the current price, they will lower the price or offer incentives. Right now NVIDIA is selling newer, quieter, more efficient chips against AMD's older, louder, less efficient chips so they are able to charge a premium.
  • HisDivineOrder - Tuesday, March 17, 2015 - link

    I really wish nVidia would allow 8GB versions of the 980. I think most of us wouldn't mind some of those 7GB versions of the 970, either.

    Either would be a lot more bang for your buck than this expensive, if admittedly awesome, card.
  • althaz - Tuesday, March 17, 2015 - link

    Ryan, this sentence bugged me: "In other words this is the “purist” flagship graphics GPU in 9 years."

    Either you meant "purest" or you meant "...this is the first "purist" flagship grahics..."

    Otherwise, great article :).
  • Ryan Smith - Tuesday, March 17, 2015 - link

    This is why Microsoft Word cannot be trusted...

    Fixed, thanks!
  • pvgg - Tuesday, March 17, 2015 - link

    This on time review is interesting and this Titan is all well and good, but I'm still waiting on the review of the card that must people can actually buy. The 960 one. Or, at least, to see it added to the gpu bench tool..
  • pvgg - Tuesday, March 17, 2015 - link

    *most people

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