Aquinus
Resident Wat-man
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Software | MacOS 12.1 |
AMD needs to explain what is a core and what is not a core because what they provide doesn't fit the mold of what people expect.
http://www.bit-tech.net/hardware/cpus/2011/10/12/amd-fx-8150-review/2BitTech said:We asked Bernard Seite, technical advisor, AMD, whether we really should regard the two execution units within a Bulldozer Module as cores and were told, ‘If you take the overall group of applications that are running on x86, 90 per cent is integer… We look at how efficient Hyper-Threading [is]. Sometimes you have negative impact, but most of the time, you have something which is in between zero and 40. The Bulldozer Module will never be negative [in its performance gains] – you have two threads, and the two threads are not going to clash.’
...
The only time two threads within a Bulldozer Module could clash, we were told, was if each required 256-bit floating point precision, for example if both threads used the new 256-bit AVX capabilities of the CPU. This is because the floating point unit – as previously alluded to – is shared and comprises two 128-bit fp units which can be ganged to produce a single 256-bit unit. However, it’s very unlikely that we’ll see many 256-bit fp threads any time soon as the standard is new and will take time to adopt. Seite also pointed out that ideally the OS (or the complier, potentially) should be aware of the capabilities of the Module and assign the second 256-bit thread to another Module, perferrably one not running any hardcore fp work.
Except it sounds exactly like people are going to expect. Once again, people keep equating bad performance to "not really being cores."
I'm pretty sure you need to read #374 again and not just the beginning about Seagate.