Discussion Future ARM Cortex + Neoverse µArchs Discussion

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poke01

Senior member
Mar 8, 2022
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But people here don't consider mobile gaming to be "real" gaming so they don't count that revenue
Not just here. The whole gaming community does not consider Apple to be a game company like Sony or Microsoft or Nintendo. Look at the quality of these games that they make, and mobile gaming which is low poly/resolution, cash grabs.

Apple doesn't have any game studios as well.
 

FlameTail

Platinum Member
Dec 15, 2021
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They care for games just fine, in fact they are the biggest gaming company on the planet. But people here don't consider mobile gaming to be "real" gaming so they don't count that revenue, they only want to count PC and console and since Mac gaming is tiny and Apple doesn't have a console this mistaken belief that "Apple doesn't care much for games" persists.
And the irony is that the mobile gaming industry has more revenue than PC gaming + console gaming combined.
 

SpudLobby

Senior member
May 18, 2022
599
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They care for games just fine, in fact they are the biggest gaming company on the planet. But people here don't consider mobile gaming to be "real" gaming so they don't count that revenue, they only want to count PC and console and since Mac gaming is tiny and Apple doesn't have a console this mistaken belief that "Apple doesn't care much for games" persists.
I’m well aware of that first part, and every time this comes up some nagging guy says that line. But they’re not going to court the big PC gaming titles and studios even though their hardware is perfectly capable.


If Apple with its war chest really cared they could also do much more for mobile gaming anyway.

Have you seen the titles on iOS? They trended towards first party stuff for a while with Arcade but it was a meme. Such a waste.
 

SpudLobby

Senior member
May 18, 2022
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I wouldn’t say they “care just fine”. They’re roughly speaking not hostile (though that’s debatable!).
 

Doug S

Platinum Member
Feb 8, 2020
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I wouldn’t say they “care just fine”. They’re roughly speaking not hostile (though that’s debatable!).

I meant more that they care in the sense that they make a lot of money from it. They have the majority of the revenue in the sector that has a majority of all gaming revenue, so they're fine where they are. They probably don't see a point in trying to promote gaming on the Mac as a corporate strategy (that won't stop some at Apple from trying to make that happen, of course)

If they could grab 20% of the PC gaming market, or a quarter of the console gaming market, it wouldn't even be noticeable in their earnings statements. Apple probably makes more selling Air Pods than any PC or console gaming studio does in total profit. When you're really big it takes something really big to move the needle, and I'm sure the Mac team knows what a huge uphill climb it would be trying to make gaming on the Mac a thing. It just isn't worth it, there are a hundred more worthwhile things they could put that effort into.
 

SpudLobby

Senior member
May 18, 2022
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I meant more that they care in the sense that they make a lot of money from it. They have the majority of the revenue in the sector that has a majority of all gaming revenue, so they're fine where they are. They probably don't see a point in trying to promote gaming on the Mac as a corporate strategy (that won't stop some at Apple from trying to make that happen, of course)

If they could grab 20% of the PC gaming market, or a quarter of the console gaming market, it wouldn't even be noticeable in their earnings statements. Apple probably makes more selling Air Pods than any PC or console gaming studio does in total profit.
Oh sure I realize this. But from a consumer POV it is what it is and it’s kind of a waste.

When you're really big it takes something really big to move the needle, and I'm sure the Mac team knows what a huge uphill climb it would be trying to make gaming on the Mac a thing. It just isn't worth it, there are a hundred more worthwhile things they could put that effort into.
Yep
 

SarahKerrigan

Senior member
Oct 12, 2014
377
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3394 is A78AE

Except it clearly isn't, in this case. The large cores in Kirin 9000S and variants are the Taishan cores built for the Kunpeng 930. (I'm pretty sure we already went over this when the 9000S came out, but I may be mixing it up with conversations I had elsewhere.)

It's just an ID collision.
 
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Nothingness

Platinum Member
Jul 3, 2013
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Except it clearly isn't, in this case. The large cores in Kirin 9000S and variants are the Taishan cores built for the Kunpeng 930. (I'm pretty sure we already went over this when the 9000S came out, but I may be mixing it up with conversations I had elsewhere.)

It's just an ID collision.
I doubt Arm would accept this. And it would be stupid to let SW believe this is an A78AE. Did Huawei publish a list of core ID?

Edit: some sources are indeed talking of internally developped cores. That's really odd and silly to reuse existing ID. OTOH I'm not sure what would be the point of using an AE derivative unless the SoC is also targetting the automotive market.
 
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SarahKerrigan

Senior member
Oct 12, 2014
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I doubt Arm would accept this. And it would be stupid to let SW believe this is an A78AE. Did Huawei publish a list of core ID?

Edit: some sources are indeed talking of internally developped cores. That's really odd and silly to reuse existing ID. OTOH I'm not sure what would be the point of using an AE derivative unless the SoC is also targetting the automotive market.

I don't know why we're rehashing this six months after 9000S's release. It's been well-known to be Taishan (specifically Taishan V120), not an ARM Ltd IP. Huawei has stated so outright and there's the little matter of it having SMT, which pretty categorically excludes A78's.

But sure. You do you. Believe it's an automotive A78 with SMT and SVE added if you like. I'm not your mother.

Edited to strike through above unnecessary and rude message.
 
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soresu

Platinum Member
Dec 19, 2014
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How is Huawei allowed to license ARM cores? Haven't they been sanctioned?
Realistically they can use whatever they want that they already have access to as long as it is only sold in China or some country that trades positively with them.

I'm not sure how long ago ARM China was cut off, but at this point it seems like Chinese companies are determined to use internally developed tech as much as possible now to minimise disruption to product roadmaps.
 

Ghostsonplanets

Senior member
Mar 1, 2024
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How is Huawei allowed to license ARM cores? Haven't they been sanctioned?
I believe Arm v9 designs were specifically made in cleanroom with no collaboration with anything US. Hence why they were able to license the new designs to Huawei. Huawei also already had license for everything up to Cortex A77, their own custom Arm cores and also (let's be honest here)Arm China who went rogue or whatever happened there.
 

Nothingness

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Jul 3, 2013
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I don't know why we're rehashing this six months after 9000S's release. It's been well-known to be Taishan (specifically Taishan V120), not an ARM Ltd IP. Huawei has stated so outright and there's the little matter of it having SMT, which pretty categorically excludes A78's.

But sure. You do you. Believe it's an automotive A78 with SMT and SVE added if you like. I'm not your mother.
Chill down. I made it explicit I thought my find made little sense. If you paid attention you'd have noticed I'm not here to win arguments but to learn, so if you want to make it personal, go have a walk and find some other target.

And if you want to discuss, you should have posted a link to sustain your claim as I did when I wrongly claimed it looked like A78AE. Quite disappointed with your childish attitude because you're one of the poster I most repect here.
 

Nothingness

Platinum Member
Jul 3, 2013
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The next Kirin processor for the Huawei Pura series: Kirin 9010.
I should have paid much more attention to the picture: the manufacturer ID is clearly stated as 72, not 65 as for Arm CPU. My bad 😑

Edit: too bad the feature list in the picture for the older core isn't complete. Does anyone know where a readable feature list for that older core is available? I don't expect it to have changed since the newer core is used with the same cores as the older SoC and having different architecture features would make thread migration more complex.
 
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SarahKerrigan

Senior member
Oct 12, 2014
377
544
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Chill down. I made it explicit I thought my find made little sense. If you paid attention you'd have noticed I'm not here to win arguments but to learn, so if you want to make it personal, go have a walk and find some other target.

And if you want to discuss, you should have posted a link to sustain your claim as I did when I wrongly claimed it looked like A78AE. Quite disappointed with your childish attitude because you're one of the poster I most repect here.

You're right, of course. My apologies. I was needlessly confrontational. I'm underslept and having a bit of a rough week, but that's no excuse.

I should have paid much more attention to the picture: the manufacturer ID is clearly stated as 72, not 65 as for Arm CPU. My bad 😑

Edit: too bad the feature list in the picture for the older core isn't complete. Does anyone know where a readable feature list for that older core is available? I don't expect it to have changed since the newer core is used with the same cores as the older SoC and having different architecture features would make thread migration more complex.

This is the best I've found.

In general, the characteristics of the core line up pretty well with what was roadmapped for Kunpeng 930 - notably SVE and SMT - so it's pretty clearly a Taishan. The really funky thing, I guess, is that it seems to be an ARMv8 core in a heterogeneous configuration with A510. I assume the A510 is operating at an ISA level equivalent to the Taishan. K9000S is a unique beast in a number of ways - it's an SVE1 design in a consumer SoC, and has SMT!

I also don't think the "big" and "mid" cores in the K9000S are actually different IP, despite the microarchitecture ID being different; I believe they're just different parameterizations of the same uarch. (I don't have strong evidence to support this at present beyond the basics - they seem to have the same featureset and Huawei wasn't known to have a smaller core in development.)
 
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soresu

Platinum Member
Dec 19, 2014
2,676
1,887
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You're right, of course. My apologies. I was needlessly confrontational. I'm underslept and having a bit of a rough week, but that's no excuse.



This is the best I've found.

In general, the characteristics of the core line up pretty well with what was roadmapped for Kunpeng 930 - notably SVE and SMT - so it's pretty clearly a Taishan. The really funky thing, I guess, is that it seems to be an ARMv8 core in a heterogeneous configuration with A510. I assume the A510 is operating at an ISA level equivalent to the Taishan. K9000S is a unique beast in a number of ways - it's an SVE1 design in a consumer SoC, and has SMT!

I also don't think the "big" and "mid" cores in the K9000S are actually different IP, despite the microarchitecture ID being different; I believe they're just different parameterizations of the same uarch. (I don't have strong evidence to support this at present beyond the basics - they seem to have the same featureset and Huawei wasn't known to have a smaller core in development.)
According to a quick Google search it is Taishan v120, roughly equivalent to Zen3 in Geekbench.
 

Nothingness

Platinum Member
Jul 3, 2013
2,429
757
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According to a quick Google search it is Taishan v120, roughly equivalent to Zen3 in Geekbench.
A one core score on Geekbench 6 Linux is here: https://browser.geekbench.com/v6/cpu/5018728
The ID is 72 (ASCII 'H') 3330 as on the Twitter post forwarded by @Ghostsonplanets above for 9000s.

The 1 core / 2 threads MT score looks extremely good. Too good to be true? Or it might be an indication of a lot of enlarged/duplicated ressources.
 

SarahKerrigan

Senior member
Oct 12, 2014
377
544
136
A one core score on Geekbench 6 Linux is here: https://browser.geekbench.com/v6/cpu/5018728
The ID is 72 (ASCII 'H') 3330 as on the Twitter post forwarded by @Ghostsonplanets above for 9000s.

The 1 core / 2 threads MT score looks extremely good. Too good to be true? Or it might be an indication of a lot of enlarged/duplicated ressources.

Geekerwan's SPEC results, if I recall, also showed large MT gains - but this could also be a case of the benchmark and/or the VM it runs on being improperly pinned to one core, I figure.
 

Nothingness

Platinum Member
Jul 3, 2013
2,429
757
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The next Kirin processor for the Huawei Pura series: Kirin 9010.
He posted information about the new core micro architecture here: It seems it has about the same resources as Cortex-X3.

And some benchmark results: https://twitter.com/negativeonehero/status/1781207840851656801

Early results are available on Geekbench too: https://browser.geekbench.com/v6/cpu/compare/5778239?baseline=5776855
 
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