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

What is "Memory Controller Load" Measuring?

HTWingNut

New Member
Joined
Aug 23, 2013
Messages
3 (0.00/day)
What is meant by the "memory controller load" in the sensors? In doing some testing, as I lower the vRAM speeds, the memory controller load goes up, as I increase vRAM speed, it goes down, but it never reaches 100% no matter what I do. Just curious what this actually means and what it's measuring?

Thanks.
 

Aquinus

Resident Wat-man
Joined
Jan 28, 2012
Messages
13,147 (2.94/day)
Location
Concord, NH, USA
System Name Apollo
Processor Intel Core i9 9880H
Motherboard Some proprietary Apple thing.
Memory 64GB DDR4-2667
Video Card(s) AMD Radeon Pro 5600M, 8GB HBM2
Storage 1TB Apple NVMe, 4TB External
Display(s) Laptop @ 3072x1920 + 2x LG 5k Ultrafine TB3 displays
Case MacBook Pro (16", 2019)
Audio Device(s) AirPods Pro, Sennheiser HD 380s w/ FIIO Alpen 2, or Logitech 2.1 Speakers
Power Supply 96w Power Adapter
Mouse Logitech MX Master 3
Keyboard Logitech G915, GL Clicky
Software MacOS 12.1
What is meant by the "memory controller load" in the sensors? In doing some testing, as I lower the vRAM speeds, the memory controller load goes up, as I increase vRAM speed, it goes down, but it never reaches 100% no matter what I do. Just curious what this actually means and what it's measuring?

Thanks.

It's similar to CPU utilization, it measures how much of your total memory bandwidth is being used. So if you increase memory speed and don't touch the core clock, you have more bandwidth and the IMC doesn't have to do as much relative to that maximum amount of "work" it can do. The opposite happens if you decrease memory speeds because there is less bandwidth to be had. I would imagine that higher load might impact latency, but maybe not until you actually get *really* close to 100% like 85-90% or higher.
 
Top