Question Alder Lake - Official Thread

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Heartbreaker

Diamond Member
Apr 3, 2006
4,260
5,257
136
It will be interesting to see which ratio of P and E cores they do for mobile. Apple went 8 and 2 for their Pro and Max cpu's but I suspect if Intel goes the same it will be pretty power hungry.

Mobile has two chips:

6P + 8E
2P + 8E
Both with 96 EU GPU.
 
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Zucker2k

Golden Member
Feb 15, 2006
1,810
1,159
136
An observation from the compterbase review.

When limited to 88 W, a 5800x is 2% faster than a 12900k in multi-threaded performance.

View attachment 52360

If we then add in 8 E cores to the 12900k and compare that to adding in 4 or 8 Zen 3 cores on top of the 5800x

View attachment 52361

The advantage for Zen 3 grows to 8% for adding 4 Zen 3 cores or 16% for adding 8 Zen 3 cores. In other words, in this power limited scenario, you get a greater performance increase with an additional 4 Zen3 cores than adding an additional 8 E cores for ADL. It would be interesting to see if this comparison changes at all at even lower power levels.
The 12900k is not power efficient when you turn off the e-cores. It seems the e-cores constrain the p-cores from guzzling power, and thereby running more efficiently (if we can call it that, in the case of the 12900k), whereas their absence signals the p-cores to use all the power budget available - resulting in huge inefficiency. Look at the slides below and pay attention to the green entry (8+8) vs the bronze entry (8+0).





So, 8+0 consumes more power than 8+8 (6w) while incurring a 38% deficit in CB R23. That is clearly wasted power. You can see a similar pattern with your slides, where 8+0 is 25% slower than 8+8 while consuming the same power, 88w. I have a sneaky suspicion that there's over-volting going on here. I'd wager that should every deactivation of the e-cores be accompanied by some kind of voltage adjustment this pattern could be reversed, unless one wants to use AVX-512, of course.

There's also the effect of the e-cores on these results themselves, which definitely can't be ruled out.
 

Hulk

Diamond Member
Oct 9, 1999
4,354
2,218
136
The 12900k is not power efficient when you turn off the e-cores. It seems the e-cores constrain the p-cores from guzzling power, and thereby running more efficiently (if we can call it that, in the case of the 12900k), whereas their absence signals the p-cores to use all the power budget available - resulting in huge inefficiency. Look at the slides below and pay attention to the green entry (8+8) vs the bronze entry (8+0).

View attachment 52364

View attachment 52363

So, 8+0 consumes more power than 8+8 (6w) while incurring a 38% deficit in CB R23. That is clearly wasted power. You can see a similar pattern with your slides, where 8+0 is 25% slower than 8+8 while consuming the same power, 88w. I have a sneaky suspicion that there's over-volting going on here. I'd wager that should every deactivation of the e-cores be accompanied by some kind of voltage adjustment this pattern could be reversed, unless one wants to use AVX-512, of course.

There's also the effect of the e-cores on these results themselves, which definitely can't be ruled out.

When you set a power limit the CPU will use all of that power, even if it is not the most efficient way to do things. In your example, when running 8+8 the Gracemonts are operating at very efficient frequencies while the Golden Cove are operating close to the danger zone. The danger zone being the area where tiny frequency increases require huge amounts of power. So you disable the 8 Gracemonts, which were happily chugging along like 8 (non-HT enabled) Skylake cores while only sipping 48W. So the CPU see 48W available and uses it to boost the Golden Coves an insignificant amount, lots of performance is lost, which is the reason for being for the Gracemont clusters. Lots of compute and efficiency in a very small amount of die space.

If Intel wanted to play the numbers game they could have created a "benchmark CPU." That would have been something like 4 Golden Coves and 24 Gracemonts. It would have destroyed highly parallel benches like CB but not been as useful in the real world where most apps don't scale so well. Imagine the heat Intel would have taken had they done that? They did the sane thing and created parts that actually work well in actual applications, not benchmarks.
 

Hulk

Diamond Member
Oct 9, 1999
4,354
2,218
136
E cores are also out of their efficiency zone I would guess at the 3.7-3.9ghz. 48w is quite a chunk of power for not a lot of throughput

Given we now KNOW Gracemont is Skylake level IPC w/o HT, how is 8 Skylake cores w/o HT at 48 watts not good? This is not speculating, this is not yesterday. Now these are facts. 8 Skylake Cores @3.7GHz without HT using 48W on the desktop is great. Do the math, 24 of them would use ~5950X power and be as or more performant in highly threaded apps that scale well with cores. The 5950X is still the performance/efficiency champ and e's alone could beat it in specific cases. Or I'm missing something? I'm always willing to learn.
 

majord

Senior member
Jul 26, 2015
440
529
136
Well comparing 6 year old 14nm architecture isn't really relevant. Skylake isn't a good yardstick anymore , by a long shot. It's also a performance core design with high fmax.

As for the 5950x comparison. Well firstly it's also heading into the inefficiency zone as far as frequency goes . It's also not an " efficiency core" by design. It's a one size fits all design. Still with a quite high Fmax. Secondly it would still be faster in your e.g

A better core for core MHz for MHz comparison would be something like a 5800H , which at the same power will sit around the same frequency , and significantly outperform it .

This means one of two things. Either GM is not efficient, or at 3.8Ghz it's outside it's sweetspot. I am suggesting the later.

Hazard a guess it's sweet spot is in the high 2s to low 3ghz. And post significantly better perf/watt Hopefully this can be tested properly one day
 

Hitman928

Diamond Member
Apr 15, 2012
5,527
8,600
136
The 12900k is not power efficient when you turn off the e-cores. It seems the e-cores constrain the p-cores from guzzling power, and thereby running more efficiently (if we can call it that, in the case of the 12900k), whereas their absence signals the p-cores to use all the power budget available - resulting in huge inefficiency. Look at the slides below and pay attention to the green entry (8+8) vs the bronze entry (8+0).

View attachment 52364

View attachment 52363

So, 8+0 consumes more power than 8+8 (6w) while incurring a 38% deficit in CB R23. That is clearly wasted power. You can see a similar pattern with your slides, where 8+0 is 25% slower than 8+8 while consuming the same power, 88w. I have a sneaky suspicion that there's over-volting going on here. I'd wager that should every deactivation of the e-cores be accompanied by some kind of voltage adjustment this pattern could be reversed, unless one wants to use AVX-512, of course.

There's also the effect of the e-cores on these results themselves, which definitely can't be ruled out.

I don't disagree with what you wrote, but it's also not really the point I was trying to make. I was really comparing the two approaches of big.medium versus all medium-big. From a performance perspective it seems medium-big is the winning formula at least from 88W and beyond. I'm interested to see what things look like once you get down in the 45W and below range.
 

Hitman928

Diamond Member
Apr 15, 2012
5,527
8,600
136
Well comparing 6 year old 14nm architecture isn't really relevant. Skylake isn't a good yardstick anymore , by a long shot. It's also a performance core design with high fmax.

As for the 5950x comparison. Well firstly it's also heading into the inefficiency zone as far as frequency goes . It's also not an " efficiency core" by design. It's a one size fits all design. Still with a quite high Fmax. Secondly it would still be faster in your e.g

A better core for core MHz for MHz comparison would be something like a 5800H , which at the same power will sit around the same frequency , and significantly outperform it .

This means one of two things. Either GM is not efficient, or at 3.8Ghz it's outside it's sweetspot. I am suggesting the later.

Hazard a guess it's sweet spot is in the high 2s to low 3ghz. And post significantly better perf/watt Hopefully this can be tested properly one day

You can also look at base clocks to get an idea (not a determination, just a hint) as to where the sweet spot range is.
 

Hulk

Diamond Member
Oct 9, 1999
4,354
2,218
136
Well comparing 6 year old 14nm architecture isn't really relevant. Skylake isn't a good yardstick anymore , by a long shot. It's also a performance core design with high fmax.

As for the 5950x comparison. Well firstly it's also heading into the inefficiency zone as far as frequency goes . It's also not an " efficiency core" by design. It's a one size fits all design. Still with a quite high Fmax. Secondly it would still be faster in your e.g

A better core for core MHz for MHz comparison would be something like a 5800H , which at the same power will sit around the same frequency , and significantly outperform it .

This means one of two things. Either GM is not efficient, or at 3.8Ghz it's outside it's sweetspot. I am suggesting the later.

Hazard a guess it's sweet spot is in the high 2s to low 3ghz. And post significantly better perf/watt Hopefully this can be tested properly one day

My use of the word "Skylake" in terms of Gracemont performance has been pretty standard parlance since Intel used it to describe the comparable performance/IPC of Gracemont. It has nothing to do with microarchitecture. I apologize for the miscommunication.

As for 48W for 8 Skylake level performance cores on the desktop not being efficient we'll have to agree to disagree.
 

Saylick

Diamond Member
Sep 10, 2012
3,361
7,058
136
Given we now KNOW Gracemont is Skylake level IPC w/o HT, how is 8 Skylake cores w/o HT at 48 watts not good? This is not speculating, this is not yesterday. Now these are facts. 8 Skylake Cores @3.7GHz without HT using 48W on the desktop is great. Do the math, 24 of them would use ~5950X power and be as or more performant in highly threaded apps that scale well with cores. The 5950X is still the performance/efficiency champ and e's alone could beat it in specific cases. Or I'm missing something? I'm always willing to learn.
I think a hypothetical 24C Gracement processor with 150W power usage vs. 16C Zen3 would be similar in highly multi-threaded apps, but will lose in single-threaded apps. This feat is great compared to what Intel had before, but reaching parity one whole year after Zen 3 launched is kinda meh. And not just meh because it's a year late, but meh because a hybrid/heterogenous approach requires a new OS scheduler and software optimization. If Intel could have achieved +20% ST perf and +100% MT perf with 16 big cores in the same power budget, they likely would've gone down that road, but alas that isn't the case.
 

A///

Diamond Member
Feb 24, 2017
4,352
3,154
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You're quite right there, @Saylick I didn't have high hopes for Alderlake myself. And even with those leaks in the weeks leading up to today's release I was left feeling underwhelmed as more info about power and heat came out. To reach parity with a 1 year old release all the while using more power, or beating a 1 year old release while using significant levels of power that make air cooling fiddly on the higher end of the spectrum feels almost like a DOA platform at this point. Even if future BIOS releases improve performance, it's still at parity or have a slight edge that make it not worth the investment, at least not at current hardware prices and relatively immature DDR5.

All eyes on AMD and what Zen3 3D will offer up. I think I'll stick with the cheap 10th gen I bought for now. I can't see myself buying a more newer Intel platform until Intel manages to deliver a wallop of a performance stride compared to AMD.

This feels more and more like historic Intel. Coming out with a half baked idea and pushing the power on it hoping to beat AMD who cruised along with a better product. Up until AMD fumbled, of course.
 

A///

Diamond Member
Feb 24, 2017
4,352
3,154
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When I upgraded my son's PC roughly a month ago, I was going to to with an 12600k and more budget friendly Z590 motherboard, but all the major retailers were out of stock (and Amazon estimating about a 30 - 45 day wait for inventory).
FYI if you order a board and something goes wrong, Amazon's holiday return period is in swing. I think it's a 90 or 120 day return period.
 

A///

Diamond Member
Feb 24, 2017
4,352
3,154
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Not so long ago(actually until today) the best gaming and productivity deal were on the 10850K, Many people were recommending it, but I did not see it on today's review?
I think that was due to the missing iGPU or simply because it was a slightly lower binned 10900K. I bought a 10th gen for dirt cheap brand new when Zen 3 was hard to get earlier this year. I'm keeping an eye out for Zen3 3D performance, but my main concern will be Zen4 and Raptor Lake.
 

insertcarehere

Senior member
Jan 17, 2013
639
607
136
I think a hypothetical 24C Gracement processor with 150W power usage vs. 16C Zen3 would be similar in highly multi-threaded apps, but will lose in single-threaded apps. This feat is great compared to what Intel had before, but reaching parity one whole year after Zen 3 launched is kinda meh. And not just meh because it's a year late, but meh because a hybrid/heterogenous approach requires a new OS scheduler and software optimization. If Intel could have achieved +20% ST perf and +100% MT perf with 16 big cores in the same power budget, they likely would've gone down that road, but alas that isn't the case.

Intel would be pretty happy with that outcome, given that 24C Gracemont takes up less die area than 16C Zen3 (closer to 8C Zen3 if taking into account L3), closing the gap on area efficiency is a big reason for GM's existance, especially in light of the fact that Zen3D goes the opposite direction with extra cache dies to improve performance at the detriment of area.
 

RanFodar

Junior Member
May 27, 2021
19
17
51
You're quite right there, @Saylick I didn't have high hopes for Alderlake myself. And even with those leaks in the weeks leading up to today's release I was left feeling underwhelmed as more info about power and heat came out. To reach parity with a 1 year old release all the while using more power, or beating a 1 year old release while using significant levels of power that make air cooling fiddly on the higher end of the spectrum feels almost like a DOA platform at this point. Even if future BIOS releases improve performance, it's still at parity or have a slight edge that make it not worth the investment, at least not at current hardware prices and relatively immature DDR5.

All eyes on AMD and what Zen3 3D will offer up. I think I'll stick with the cheap 10th gen I bought for now. I can't see myself buying a more newer Intel platform until Intel manages to deliver a wallop of a performance stride compared to AMD.

This feels more and more like historic Intel. Coming out with a half baked idea and pushing the power on it hoping to beat AMD who cruised along with a better product. Up until AMD fumbled, of course.
Personally? I expected Alder Lake to compete with Zen 3, but not outperform it. After all, this is their "Zen 1" moment in my view; their first big foray into Intel's hybrid architecture, and many modern games and productivity applications will need optimizations to fully utilize Alder Lake's potential. This is all early adopter stuff, and if you could wait for Raptor Lake, where everything will be optimized by that time, I think it would be worth it.
 
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Markfw

Moderator Emeritus, Elite Member
May 16, 2002
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I think the Venn diagram of people buying flagship CPUs but fussing over pennies in electric costs are basically non-existent.

Now pure heat output as a concern for someone literally running full load 24/7, that is actually a type of person that exists.
But it does not address the 142 watt (stock) that I run my 5950x's at, and 12900k looses in performance, wattage and heat in my use case.
 

Markfw

Moderator Emeritus, Elite Member
May 16, 2002
25,722
14,752
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I think there's a typo in their write-up. From the chart, it's clear that it's the 5900x that is 8% faster when both are at 88W. The 5950x is 16% faster than the 12900k when it is also at 88W. The problem really comes from Intel only having 8 performance cores, so trying to catch up to the 16 performance Zen 3 cores becomes a tall task and ADL has to start using larger and larger amounts of power to match the 16 cores once they are fed a bit more as well. I.e. the power curve becomes much steeper for the 12900k vs. the 5950x as higher performance levels are reached.

View attachment 52356
I think this proves my point, as well as the 241 watt vs 142 watt, and the temps of the 12900k
 
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Arkaign

Lifer
Oct 27, 2006
20,736
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But it does not address the 142 watt (stock) that I run my 5950x's at, and 12900k looses in performance, wattage and heat in my use case.

Indeed. I think the 12900K is of very narrow appeal, bursty type loads like someone running Photoshop for work, weekly Premiere renders, etc. For heavy sustained compute, 5950 or TR builds just make more sense. For (very high end) gaming, 12600/700 make more sense, for budget gaming sticking with old Zen2/Coffee Lake is advisable IMHO.
 
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