• Welcome to TechPowerUp Forums, Guest! Please check out our forum guidelines for info related to our community.

AMD to Present "Zen 5" Microarchitecture Deep-dive at Hot Chips 2024

btarunr

Editor & Senior Moderator
Staff member
Joined
Oct 9, 2007
Messages
46,675 (7.66/day)
Location
Hyderabad, India
System Name RBMK-1000
Processor AMD Ryzen 7 5700G
Motherboard ASUS ROG Strix B450-E Gaming
Cooling DeepCool Gammax L240 V2
Memory 2x 8GB G.Skill Sniper X
Video Card(s) Palit GeForce RTX 2080 SUPER GameRock
Storage Western Digital Black NVMe 512GB
Display(s) BenQ 1440p 60 Hz 27-inch
Case Corsair Carbide 100R
Audio Device(s) ASUS SupremeFX S1220A
Power Supply Cooler Master MWE Gold 650W
Mouse ASUS ROG Strix Impact
Keyboard Gamdias Hermes E2
Software Windows 11 Pro
AMD is slated to deliver a "Zen 5" microarchitecture deep-dive at the Hot Chips 2024 conference, on August 25. The company is widely expected to either unveil or announce its next-generation processors based on the architecture, in its 2024 Computex keynote on June 3, so it remains to be seen if the deep-dive follows a product launch, or predates it. Either way, Hot Chips talks tend to be significantly more detailed than the product launch pre-briefs that we get; and so we hope to learn a lot more about the architecture.

A lot rides on the continued success of "Zen 5" to deliver a double-digit percentage IPC increase over its predecessor, while also introducing new microarchitecture-level features; and leveraging new foundry processes at TSMC, to deliver competitive processors to Intel. Unlike Intel, which has implemented hybrid CPU cores across its product stack, AMD continues to make traditional multicore processors, and refuses to level even the chips that contain regular and high-density versions of its "Zen 4" cores as "hybrid."



View at TechPowerUp Main Site | Source
 
Joined
Mar 7, 2011
Messages
4,079 (0.84/day)
Unlike Intel, which has implemented hybrid CPU cores across its product stack, AMD continues to make traditional multicore processors, and refuses to level even the chips that contain regular and high-density versions of its "Zen 4" cores as "hybrid."
AMD does sell chips with mix of full fat and efficiency oriented C chips.
 
Joined
Dec 16, 2021
Messages
157 (0.17/day)
Location
Denmark
Processor AMD Ryzen 7 3800X
Motherboard ASUS Prime X470-Pro
Cooling bequiet! Dark Rock Slim
Memory 64 GB ECC DDR4 2666 MHz (Samsung M391A2K43BB1-CTD)
Video Card(s) eVGA GTX 1080 SC Gaming, 8 GB
Storage 1 TB Samsung 970 EVO Plus, 1 TB Samsung 850 EVO, 4 TB Lexar NM790, 12 TB WD HDDs
Display(s) Acer Predator XB271HU
Case Corsair Obsidian 550D
Audio Device(s) Creative X-Fi Fatal1ty
Power Supply Seasonic X-Series 560W
Mouse Logitech G502
Keyboard Glorious GMMK
Maybe it's just me but I think naming this conference "Hot Chips" is a bit unfortunate. And yes, I know it's been around for years. I also cannot come up with a better name right now, not that it matters.
 
Joined
Jan 8, 2017
Messages
9,137 (3.37/day)
System Name Good enough
Processor AMD Ryzen R9 7900 - Alphacool Eisblock XPX Aurora Edge
Motherboard ASRock B650 Pro RS
Cooling 2x 360mm NexXxoS ST30 X-Flow, 1x 360mm NexXxoS ST30, 1x 240mm NexXxoS ST30
Memory 32GB - FURY Beast RGB 5600 Mhz
Video Card(s) Sapphire RX 7900 XT - Alphacool Eisblock Aurora
Storage 1x Kingston KC3000 1TB 1x Kingston A2000 1TB, 1x Samsung 850 EVO 250GB , 1x Samsung 860 EVO 500GB
Display(s) LG UltraGear 32GN650-B + 4K Samsung TV
Case Phanteks NV7
Power Supply GPS-750C
AMD does sell chips with mix of full fat and efficiency oriented C chips.
As far as I can tell the 4C cores just have SMT and some cache removed, they're still very much Zen 4 cores with nearly identical IPC.
 
Joined
Mar 13, 2021
Messages
432 (0.36/day)
Processor AMD 7600x
Motherboard Asrock x670e Steel Legend
Cooling Silver Arrow Extreme IBe Rev B with 2x 120 Gentle Typhoons
Memory 4x16Gb Patriot Viper Non RGB @ 6000 30-36-36-36-40
Video Card(s) XFX 6950XT MERC 319
Storage 2x Crucial P5 Plus 1Tb NVME
Display(s) 3x Dell Ultrasharp U2414h
Case Coolermaster Stacker 832
Power Supply Thermaltake Toughpower PF3 850 watt
Mouse Logitech G502 (OG)
Keyboard Logitech G512
AMD does sell chips with mix of full fat and efficiency oriented C chips.
Not in the same way as Intel does.

AMD chips are the same microarchitecture with just a physical space optimisation and reduction of cache.
Intel is a different archtetcure between E core and P Core which did and can lead to weird interactions with certain software.
 
Joined
Dec 12, 2016
Messages
1,385 (0.51/day)
“…AMD continues to make traditional multicore processors, and refuses to level even the chips…”

I think you meant ‘label’ not ‘level’.

Maybe it's just me but I think naming this conference "Hot Chips" is a bit unfortunate. And yes, I know it's been around for years. I also cannot come up with a better name right now, not that it matters.
How about ‘Chips that Matter’?
 
Joined
Dec 16, 2021
Messages
157 (0.17/day)
Location
Denmark
Processor AMD Ryzen 7 3800X
Motherboard ASUS Prime X470-Pro
Cooling bequiet! Dark Rock Slim
Memory 64 GB ECC DDR4 2666 MHz (Samsung M391A2K43BB1-CTD)
Video Card(s) eVGA GTX 1080 SC Gaming, 8 GB
Storage 1 TB Samsung 970 EVO Plus, 1 TB Samsung 850 EVO, 4 TB Lexar NM790, 12 TB WD HDDs
Display(s) Acer Predator XB271HU
Case Corsair Obsidian 550D
Audio Device(s) Creative X-Fi Fatal1ty
Power Supply Seasonic X-Series 560W
Mouse Logitech G502
Keyboard Glorious GMMK
Not in the same way as Intel does.

AMD chips are the same microarchitecture with just a physical space optimisation and reduction of cache.
Intel is a different archtetcure between E core and P Core which did and can lead to weird interactions with certain software.
Wasn't one of the reasons for Windows 11 that a new scheduler was needed that could handle Intel's new heterogeneous architecture?

How about ‘Chips that Matter’?
I see what you did there... :p
 
Joined
Mar 13, 2021
Messages
432 (0.36/day)
Processor AMD 7600x
Motherboard Asrock x670e Steel Legend
Cooling Silver Arrow Extreme IBe Rev B with 2x 120 Gentle Typhoons
Memory 4x16Gb Patriot Viper Non RGB @ 6000 30-36-36-36-40
Video Card(s) XFX 6950XT MERC 319
Storage 2x Crucial P5 Plus 1Tb NVME
Display(s) 3x Dell Ultrasharp U2414h
Case Coolermaster Stacker 832
Power Supply Thermaltake Toughpower PF3 850 watt
Mouse Logitech G502 (OG)
Keyboard Logitech G512
Wasn't one of the reasons for Windows 11 that a new scheduler was needed that could handle Intel's new heterogeneous architecture?
Not directly but things like VMware Workstation has a real tendancy to crash out VMs due to the way it tries to shift vms running from P to E Cores and vice versa.

the Scheduler was there so that things that needed performance (games, video encoding etc) were pushed onto the P cores but if you didnt need that performance/were only running background tasks it would push things to E cores and power down the P cores aggressively to save power etc. Most of this was meant to be done in the hardware scheduler built into the CPU directly and all windows was doing was supplying info regarding the app and if it was a background task etc.
 
Joined
Oct 22, 2014
Messages
13,326 (3.78/day)
Location
Sunshine Coast
System Name Lenovo ThinkCentre
Processor AMD 5650GE
Motherboard Lenovo
Memory 32 GB DDR4
Display(s) AOC 24" Freesync 1m.s. 75Hz
Mouse Lenovo
Keyboard Lenovo
Software W11 Pro 64 bit
AMD is hoping consumers will be like Seagulls all over these Hot Chips.
 
Joined
Mar 13, 2021
Messages
432 (0.36/day)
Processor AMD 7600x
Motherboard Asrock x670e Steel Legend
Cooling Silver Arrow Extreme IBe Rev B with 2x 120 Gentle Typhoons
Memory 4x16Gb Patriot Viper Non RGB @ 6000 30-36-36-36-40
Video Card(s) XFX 6950XT MERC 319
Storage 2x Crucial P5 Plus 1Tb NVME
Display(s) 3x Dell Ultrasharp U2414h
Case Coolermaster Stacker 832
Power Supply Thermaltake Toughpower PF3 850 watt
Mouse Logitech G502 (OG)
Keyboard Logitech G512
As long as Zen 5 steps up on the IO die especially the memory controller aspect itll be a hell of a step up.
 
Joined
May 22, 2024
Messages
124 (5.17/day)
System Name Kuro
Processor AMD Ryzen 7 7800X3D@65W
Motherboard MSI MAG B650 Tomahawk WiFi
Cooling Thermalright Phantom Spirit 120 EVO
Memory Corsair DDR5 6000C30 2x48GB (Hynix M)@6000 30-36-36-48 1.36V
Video Card(s) PNY XLR8 RTX 4070 Ti SUPER 16G@200W
Storage Crucial T500 2TB + WD Blue 8TB
Case Lian Li LANCOOL 216
Audio Device(s) Sound Blaster AE-7
Power Supply MSI MPG A850G
Software Ubuntu 24.04 LTS + Windows 10 Home Build 19045
Benchmark Scores 17761 C23 Multi@65W
IO die is basically same as for Zen 4, just supports faster memory out of the box. You'll have to wait for Zen 6 apparently.
Not good if confirmed, when the IO die - or more specifically the IF infrastructure of the IOD and the CCD, as well as the internal data path of the IOD, caps maximum memory bandwidth. I think the maximum theoretical number is 64GB/s at 2000MHz FCLK, proportional, no matter how fast the memory is running on memory controller side.

This - sequential RAM read bandwidth - mattered for AI workloads, which is apparently the newest thing everyone is capitalizing on. Lunar Lake is apparently going after that with its LPDDR5X-on-package design.

EDIT: To illustrate the problem, my current system does LLM inference on CPU at an indicated 60GB/s, while the system I upgraded from, an AMD Cezanne-based setup with DDR4-3200, did it at around 43GB/s. The performance improvement is noticeable, but at first less than expected. If I set my RAM to JEDEC speed with default FCLK(DDR5-4800, 1600MHz FCLK, same as the Cezanne), then there's ~zero improvement.

For every token generated, an LLM would need to iterate through the entire active model weight once, and those are several GB minimum for models of useful performance. It's going to be a problem, if powerful client-side AI ever works out for the general consumer.

Not all AI workloads are LLM, but LLM and Transformer-based models in other modalities are the stars of the current AI boom.
 
Last edited:

ARF

Joined
Jan 28, 2020
Messages
4,201 (2.63/day)
Location
Ex-usa | slava the trolls
Maybe it's just me but I think naming this conference "Hot Chips" is a bit unfortunate. And yes, I know it's been around for years. I also cannot come up with a better name right now, not that it matters.

Unfortunate is not the right word. This is a natural consequence of natural processes - Moore's law is dead, processes optimisation stagnation, and corresponding exponential manufacturing costs increases, which means in the future there won't be new chips, at all. The question is when.

A better name would be "Innovation & Chips", "New Chips", "Modern Chips", "Fast Chips", or whatever else, but not literally "hot".
 
Joined
Aug 25, 2023
Messages
156 (0.53/day)
System Name Favourite toy(s)
Processor Ryzen 5 7600X lapped @ Custom PBO boost & Ryzen 7 7700 @ stock
Motherboard Asrock X670E Steel Legend / Gigabyte B650 Aorus Elite
Cooling Deep Cool AK620 / Stock cooler
Memory G.Skill F5-5600J3036D16GX2-FX5 / Corsair Vengeance CMH32GX5M2B5600C36
Video Card(s) RX 6800 XT factory OC + 2600core|2150mem / iGPU
Storage 1 + 2TB T-Force Cardea A440 pro / 2 x Kingston KC3000 1TB
Display(s) Asus TUF Gaming VG34VQL3A / Samsung C32G55TQWE
Case MSI MPG Sekira 100R / Silverstone Redline mATX
Audio Device(s) Asus Xonar AE 7.1 + Audio Technica -AD500X / Onboard + Creative 2.1 soundbar
Power Supply Corsair RM1000x V2 / Corsair RM750x V2
Mouse MSI Clutch GM20 Elite / CM Reaper
Keyboard Logitech G512 Carbon / MSI G30 Vigor
Can't wait to see benchmarks of this new range of chips, they look attractive on paper, but reality is another kettle of fish as usual.
 
Joined
May 3, 2018
Messages
2,446 (1.09/day)
Unfortunate is not the right word. This is a natural consequence of natural processes - Moore's law is dead, processes optimisation stagnation, and corresponding exponential manufacturing costs increases, which means in the future there won't be new chips, at all. The question is when.

A better name would be "Innovation & Chips", "New Chips", "Modern Chips", "Fast Chips", or whatever else, but not literally "hot".
Given it's all about AI now, I'm surprised it hasn't been renamed to Smart or Intelligent Chips.

We have a brand of beer in Australia called Minimum Chips, which I quite like.
 
Top