The High-Level Zen Overview

AMD is keen to stress that the Zen project had three main goals: core, cache and power. The power aspect of the design is one that was very aggressive – not in the sense of aiming for a mobile-first design, but efficiency at the higher performance levels was key in order to be competitive again. It is worth noting that AMD did not mention ‘die size’ in any of the three main goals, which is usually a requirement as well. Arguably you can make a massive core design to run at high performance and low latency, but it comes at the expense of die size which makes the cost of such a design from a product standpoint less economical (if AMD had to rely on 500mm2 die designs in consumer at 14nm, they would be priced way too high). Nevertheless, power was the main concern rather than pure performance or function, which have been typical AMD targets in the past. The shifting of the goal posts was part of the process to creating Zen.

This slide contains a number of features we will hit on later in this piece, but covers a number of main topics which come under those main three goals of core, cache and power.

For the core, having bigger and wider everything was to be expected, however maintaining a low latency can be difficult. Features such as the micro-op cache help most instruction streams improve in performance and bypass parts of potentially long-cycle repetitive operations, but also the larger dispatch, larger retire, larger schedulers and better branch prediction means that higher throughput can be maintained longer and in the fastest order possible. Add in dual threads and the applicability of keeping the functional units occupied with full queues also improves multi-threaded performance.

For the caches, having a faster prefetch and better algorithms ensures the data is ready when each of the caches when a thread needs it. Aiming for faster caches was AMD’s target, and while they are not disclosing latencies or bandwidth at this time, we are being told that L1/L2 bandwidth is doubled with L3 up to 5x.

For the power, AMD has taken what it learned with Carrizo and moved it forward. This involves more aggressive monitoring of critical paths around the core, and better control of the frequency and power in various regions of the silicon. Zen will have more clock regions (it seems various parts of the back-end and front-end can be gated as needed) with features that help improve power efficiency, such as the micro-op cache, the Stack Engine (dedicated low power address manipulation unit) and Move elimination (low-power method for register adjustment - pointers to registers are adjusted rather than going through the high-power scheduler).

The Big Core Diagram

We saw this diagram last year, showing some of the bigger features AMD wants to promote:

The improved branch predictor allows for 2 branches per Branch Target Buffer (BTB), but in the event of tagged instructions will filter through the micro-op cache. On the other side, the decoder can dispatch 4 instructions per cycle however some of those instructions can be fused into the micro-op queue. Fused instructions still come out of the queue as two micro-ops, but take up less buffer space as a result.

As mentioned earlier, the INT and FP pipes and schedulers are separated, however the INT rename space is 168 registers wide, which feeds into 6x14 scheduling queues. The FP employs as 160 entry register file, and both the FP and INT sections feed into a 192-entry retire queue. The retire queue can operate at 8 instructions per cycle, moving up from 4/cycle in previous AMD microarchitectures.

The load/store units are improved, supporting a 72 out-of-order loads, similar to Skylake. We’ll discuss this a bit later. On the FP side there are four pipes (compared to three in previous designs) which support combined 128-bit FMAC instructions. These can be combined for one 256-bit AVX, but beyond that it has to be scheduled over multiple instructions.

The Ryzen Die Fetch and Decode
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  • zodiacfml - Friday, March 3, 2017 - link

    If there's one thing to get excited for are the upcomingAPUs. They will not be held that much anymore by the CPU and the graphics will show its true performance. The APU with HBM is drool worthy.
  • Demigod79 - Friday, March 3, 2017 - link

    The reviews are a bit disappointing gaming-wise but I'm very excited for Ryzen 7. I'm heavily into distributed computing and I'm looking forward to adding a second system based on Ryzen to accompany my primary Haswell (4970K). I might also game on it on the side but it's a secondary consideration (sadly, being in your mid-thirties doesn't leave much time for gaming). I'm just hoping there are no hiccups with installation or driver support.

    The fact that AMD offers a 16-thread CPU for half the price of an Intel one (and with comparable performance) is a major win. It seems that some people see the Ryzen 7 as a competitor to the 7700K (probably based on pricing) but I don't - why would anyone buy a 16-thread processor for gaming? (isn't that a massive waste of computing power?) When I first heard of the Ryzen 7 my immediate thought was grid computing, not GTA V. The Ryzen 5 and 3 would be better suited for gaming and general-purpose PC use.
  • Meteor2 - Friday, March 3, 2017 - link

    If you're into DC why aren't you buying GPUs?
  • just4U - Friday, March 3, 2017 - link

    What interests me about this review is what's not there... The mid/lower end range should be even more competitive once their stuff gets to market.. 6 Core stuff competing with the i5 and 4 core with the i3-pentium.

    It's the first time in years where we can actually start to really get interested in the CPU segment again..as it should push intel to be more competitive as well.
  • GeoffreyA - Friday, March 3, 2017 - link

    Yes. I am not sure whether it's still online or what; but I suppose it is. This fab in Germany came online in the days of the Athlon. I think that it began producing copper-interconnect CPUs while the Austin plant was still using aluminium interconnect, or something like that.
  • GeoffreyA - Friday, March 3, 2017 - link

    (Sorry about the last comment. I was replying to another comment, but it went here instead.)
  • gnawrot - Friday, March 3, 2017 - link

    This CPU is a high end workstation CPU. It is tailored for that and closer to future server CPU from AMD. AMD expressed desire to gain higher server CPU market share. AMD might customize their CPUs for gaming later. It is hard to tackle so many projects with such a budget. Frankly, I am impressed what AMD has done lately. They have done as much as NVidia and Intel combined if not more.
  • charliebi - Friday, March 3, 2017 - link

    I am really sick of hardware constantly being evaluated against gamers objectives. I understand gamers are a very vocal minority online but still a niche. This particular CPU is not aimed at gamers and thanks god there are still products that are not meant for gamers even if it seems that everything should be defined in terms of FPS. And a big part of this flawed situation is due to reviewers that encourage this habit. Who gives a s*** if a 8 core CPU meant for workstations does not run doom at 250FPS.
  • Meteor2 - Friday, March 3, 2017 - link

    I think gamers are the large majority of consumers who buy $150+ CPUs.
  • prisonerX - Saturday, March 4, 2017 - link

    Nah, gamers are just self important twits.

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