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Alleged AMD EPYC ‘Rome’ 7nm Based 64 Core Processor Performance Leaks Out

wccftech.com

45 points by t3f 7 years ago · 11 comments

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dougmwne 7 years ago

>You heard it, right folks, AMD’s 2019 CPU family is designed to tackle the Intel 10nm Ice Lake Xeons favorably and things are looking really good for AMD as their Rome CPU family will only be competing against Intel’s 14nm++ server refreshed family, aka Cascade Lake-SP.

More evidence that AMD may soon pull ahead in the performance race as they take good advantage of Intel's 10nm stumble.

CoolGuySteve 7 years ago

We already saw that the Threadripper 2990 is starved for bandwidth between Zen packages due to the infinity fabric design.

So you get incredible cinebench performance (and some other 'embarrassingly parallel' workloads), but it doesn't scale to other kinds of programs that have more interthread/interprocess communication.

I guess it remains to be seen what happens with EPYC, but my initial guess is that it will have a similar infinity fabric design to hit 64 cores/128 hyperthreads.

BTW has anyone done an R mclapply benchmark on Threadripper 2990? I was set to buy one until I saw the uneven benchmark scores.

  • TheGuyWhoCodes 7 years ago

    Yes, infinity fabric has limitations. Threadripper suffers in memory intensive workloads because only half of the CCXs have a dedicated memory controller thus some cores need to talk to another CCX to access memory. On EPYC each CCX has its own memory controller so it's less of an issue.

  • jesuslop 7 years ago

    Bad interthread is tolerable as long as concurrent running from cache is good

bryanlarsen 7 years ago

Twice the number of cores compared to first generation EPYC with its main competitor misfiring. So do they go for profit and double the price or go for market share and keep it the same? As both a consumer and a stock holder, I'm hoping for closer to the latter.

  • nwmcsween 7 years ago

    Supply vs demand but it would be smart to discount low end server class CPUs for market share (not the 64 core CPU).

mrep 7 years ago

Anyone here familiar with overall performance / server costs to give an insight if AMD might actually become competitive considering with all the hype around AMD these days, I have still yet to see any of the 3 major providers offer an AMD chip?

  • patrickg_zill 7 years ago

    I don't know about offering the latest chips, but Dell and HP at least, have offered AMD based servers for many years now...?

homero 7 years ago

AMD needs their own foundry again

  • foepys 7 years ago

    Global Foundries just recently scrapped their 7nm process because it was too expensive. It's to AMD's advantage to not have a foundry.

    On the other hand it's not good for the market in the long run when TSMC has a monopoly on 7nm...

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