AMD Ryzen 2000 (12nm Zen+) expectations

gOJDO_n

Member
Nov 13, 2017
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Hi folks,

I talked to my crystal ball and here is what it said about AMD and what can we expect from them in order to remain competitive and even surpass Intel in both performance and power efficiency in certain CPU segments. Jokes aside, these are just my expectations and visions and are based on my imagination and knowledge only, but not on any AMD roadmap or insider information.

With the money earned in 2017, the good development and production partners, the right team motivated, AMD have great chances to surprise not only us, the customers, but the entire semiconductor industry. AMD had enough time to discover most of the Zen weaknesses and to find out easy-implementable solutions and fixes for most. It now depends mostly on their ambitions to compete with Intel. I believe that with a little effort they can now bring to the table much better Zen+ SKUs than Zen did. Like they said, Zen was only the beginning and it already is competing quite well in all segments. Step by step, AMD are going to fix most of the macro and micro-architectural issues of Zen with every silicon iteration and here I'm talking about the issues I expect AMD to fix with a silicon update in the following 2018.

1) AMD Ryzen 2000A series desktop APU

I expect the first Ryzen Desktop APUS on the sAM4 to be the same Ryzen 2xxxU mobile series APUs, tweaked for higher performance and power envelope. Some of these should include all 11 CUs enabled on the GPU part and higher GPU, CPU base/boost/xFR and DRAM clocks compared to the mobile variants. Since the same chips will be used, these desktop APUs will have all the power and efficiency improvements, like Precision Boost 2, present in the mobile Ryzen 2000U APUs.

The CPU part will have higher clocks and voltages compared to the mobile parts. It's performance, depending on the workload, will vary between the performance of a Ryzen 5 1500X/Core i3 8100 and a Ryzen 1600/Core i5 8400. The GPU performance on the, best performing, Ryzen 5 2400AX will vary between a dedicated RX550/GT1030 and a dedicated RX560/GTX1050 on resolutions up to 1080p.



The Ryzen 2000A desktop APUs, just like the 2000U mobile APUS, will have per core voltage and frequency regulation. This feature will enable the OC-ers to squeeze the maximal possible frequency at the lowest possible voltage for each CPU core and the GPU independently.

The CPU cores on most APUs will achieve 4GHz stable with some APUs hitting 4.1GHz on all cores at acceptable voltages and temperatures for a everyday use.
Most of the APUs regardless of the number of CUs on their GPU will achieve stable GPU clocks ranging from 1500 to 1600MHz.

Overclocking the DRAM controller and using a faster DDR4-3200 MHz (51.2 GB/s max bandwidth) will have small impact on the CPU performance, but great on the GPU and should bring almost linear ~20% framerate increase in GPU limited scenarios.

Such OC-ed APU will be powerfull enough to run most of todays DX12 titles at 1080p at aceptable framerates and visuals. The lowest performing R3 2100A combined with a mediocre B350 motherboard and a cheap 2x4GB DDR4-2666 will be the best low budget solution for multimedia, office and light gaming. Having very low total system power consumption will park these APUs in many mini-ITX mainboards and slim mini ITX w/o room for dedicated VGA(for example: https://www.in-win.com/en/computer-chassis/bq-series/USA), some of them even with fanless solutions.


2) AMD Ryzen 2000 desktop CPUs (12nm FinFET Zen+)

The Ryzen 2000 CPUs include the same macro-architectural improvements of the Ryzen 2000 series APUs and will bring some new, while the micro-architecture of the cores will remain same. The greatest improvement of all is going to be the new InfinityFabric 2 with Data Fabric 2 which will operate at double the clock speed of Data Fabric 1 on Infinity Fabric 1 on the Ryzen 1000/2000 CPUs/APUs or at the DRAM clock speed, providing twice the I/O bandwidth to everything connected with the DataFabric 2. This will result in:
- CCX to CCX and die to die absolute latencies to be cut to half
- CCX to CCX and die to die bandwidth to be doubled
- RAM access latency to be reduced by up to 50% depending of the CPU package (MCM or not) and configuration (UMA vs NUMA for ThreadRipper) and DRAM clock and latencies.
- RAM bandwidth to be slightly improved

These improvements will have a huge impact on gaming performanses, especially at 1080p and 1440p where Ryzen 1000 CPUs are bottlenecking the VGA in most modern games. Ryzen 2000 with the same number of cores/threads and clocked the same will perform 10-20% better in games on the very same system. At 4K it will not only match a same clocked, and same number of cores/threads, Coffe Lake/Skylake-X CPUs, but in some scenarios it will even outperform them.

In productivity and other kind of software IF2 will not bring any noticeable performance improvements. Ryzen TR and EPYC CPUS based on Zen+ might see more gains than Ryzen 3/5/7 in certain workloads which involve intensive data transfers across multiple dies and CCXs by significantly reducing the access time and doubling the transfer bandwidth between the CCX's of diferent dies and their IMCs.




Other than the CPU peroformance improvements, the new AMD 400 series chipsets will bring greater and faster connectivity thanks to the doubled bandwidth to the CPU by the PCIe 4.0 x4 connection.

The second, very important upgrade on the Ryzen 2000 CPUS is the improved, 12nm LPP FinFET, production process compared to the Ryzen 1000/2000A 14nm FinFET. The new process will bring 5-10% higher clocks(read performance) using the same power or 10-20% lower power consumption at the same clocks. I expect 8 core SKUs with 4.1GHz boost clock on all cores and 4.3GHz XFR boost on two cores.

ThreadRipper will get the best 5% of all dies, so 4.4GHz 4-core XFR boost will be common for all TR CPUs (except the 2900X which will have 2-core XFR boost). There might be even a 8-core SKU with 2 cores per CCX hitting 4.5GHz.

These upgraded Ryzen TR 2000 CPUs will give a very hard time to Intel Skylake-X CPUs with the same number of cores. 7960X in average will get outperformed by TR 2960X , while the 7920X will run toe-to-toe with the 2930X. All Skylake-X CPUs will get a massive pricecut inorder to remain competitive with the ThreadRipper 2000 Zen+ CPUs.

So folks, what do you think ?
 
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gOJDO_n

Member
Nov 13, 2017
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Do you have a source for an of this information?
I have no other info than what is already available on the internet.
These numbers and features are not just pulled out of my a$$, but are precisely picked and polished having connection with reality and what's possible.
 

ozzy702

Golden Member
Nov 1, 2011
1,151
530
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Those memory specs look high to me and I'm sorry but I don't see AMD matching CFL clock for clock on Zen+, let alone pulling ahead. Ryzen's memory latency is a lot higher than Intel's and when looking at max memory OC CFL is down in the mid to high 30ns range and Ryzens is double that. This is simply wishful thinking. AMD has always struggled with memory controllers, a 50% reduction in latency is a HUGE jump.

Zen+ will bring low single digit IPC improvements and a nice ~ 10-15% clockspeed bump but I don't expect anything more than that. If pricing stays the same Zen+ will be a phenomenal value but a lot of the claims in your post happening until 2019 with Zen2 and even then I'm not sure they will happen.
 
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Topweasel

Diamond Member
Oct 19, 2000
5,436
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I would hazard to guess that EPYC and TR don't get a Zen+ upgrade. Mostly because those lines generally are not big on constant changes and updating one updates them both and the potential performance swing for EPYC is relatively small because of the 4 dies (much small clock increases).
 
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burninatortech4

Senior member
Jan 29, 2014
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Since this is clearly a speculation thread, I doubt we will see a full infinity fabric overhaul on the second iteration. I expect to see some minor improvements to the IMC, along with a minor clock bump, but I'm always cautiously optimistic to avoid being disappointed.

What I'm mostly excited about is improved ability to set XMP timings that just 'work'. This shouldn't be too dependent on motherboard since Ryzen is a SoC.

Also, AMD's Ryzen naming scheme from their presentation slides clearly indicated that's desktop APU's will be denoted with the 'G' suffix.
 
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TimCh

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Apr 7, 2012
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The chance of 2nd generation infinity band is zero. They might very well do some minor tweaks reducing latency.

Precession boost 2 is a given, increasing the average clockspeed.

Slight tweaks to the memory controller and improved AGESA will increase memory speeds and improve compatibility. Better auto memory timings.

10ish percent clockspeed increase.

No or very little IPC increase from core improvements.

Overall performance improvement in the 10-15% range.

Significant reduction in power consumption at iso clock, they might introduce a 45w TDB desktop range.

I don't expect a new Epyc lineup before Zen 2, unsure about Threadripper.
 

Cloudfire777

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Mar 24, 2013
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Higher clocks due to new process. Closer to Intel.
A tiny bit better IPC
More cores for the highest end

Thats about it
 

scannall

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Jan 1, 2012
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PCIe 4 would require a new socket. I expect both AMD and Intel to switch to it in 2020 or so. Along with DDR5.
 
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blublub

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Jul 19, 2016
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The chance of 2nd generation infinity band is zero. They might very well do some minor tweaks reducing latency.

Precession boost 2 is a given, increasing the average clockspeed.

Slight tweaks to the memory controller and improved AGESA will increase memory speeds and improve compatibility. Better auto memory timings.

10ish percent clockspeed increase.

No or very little IPC increase from core improvements.

Overall performance improvement in the 10-15% range.

Significant reduction in power consumption at iso clock, they might introduce a 45w TDB desktop range.

I don't expect a new Epyc lineup before Zen 2, unsure about Threadripper.
In general I do agree.
But since AMDs CPU department pulled an IPC increase of over 52% and already integrated quite some changes into RR which were prior planned for Zen I wouldn't be surprised to see a higher bandwidth IF

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Spartak

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Jul 4, 2015
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There should be 35W parts available for the SFF crowd. It was mentioned in at least one of their slides, so you could have at least use the info available to you for an informed guess...

 
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IRobot23

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Jul 3, 2017
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In general I do agree.
But since AMDs CPU department pulled an IPC increase of over 52% and already integrated quite some changes into RR which were prior planned for Zen I wouldn't be surprised to see a higher bandwidth IF

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CPU?
We can all agree that speed of DF is Ryzen weakness. So if pinnacle somehow fix that DRAM latency with slower/faster memory we can see good improvement in gaming.

APU?
Ryzen shows some insane number in AIDA64 with really fast ram. Bristol cannot reach even 30GB/s.


We could se like 2-2.25x better APU performance:

1. DF could be crucial here, distribution of resources.
2. VEGA memory architecture.

Check this:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zCzwGqxWCxg
Ryzen APU may beat that.

- We can see that both of them are made for MCM.
 
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lixlax

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Nov 6, 2014
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Very interesting thread.

I'd like to keep my expectations in check and I don't think they'll make any IPC-worthy changes to the cores/die, but maybe we'll get ~200-400MHz higher (max)clocks. As I understand that 12nm is still a 14nm LPP at its heart.
 

Topweasel

Diamond Member
Oct 19, 2000
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IF isn't going to be touched. Slight chance of a better Memory controller and good chance for faster memory support.
 
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StinkyPinky

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Jul 6, 2002
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Higher clocks due to new process. Closer to Intel.
A tiny bit better IPC
More cores for the highest end

Thats about it

For TR maybe, but I don't think they will do more cores for Ryzen. 8 cores is already more than Intel offer for mainstream and I'm hoping they will focus more on getting the IPC and clockspeed up.
 

Glo.

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Apr 25, 2015
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If the Raven Ridge APUs are going to be 35-65W TDP range for desktop, then it is obvious, what we will get in April as AMD is rumored to release low-power CPUs.

Yep, 35W TDP CPUs might be Raven Ridge design. For buyers interested in SFF computers, and basic usage of computer that will be a blast.

4C/8T RR+ 8-10 CU Vega GPU inside, 8 GB DDR4, 256 GB SSD. What more do you want for this kind of use case?
 

moinmoin

Diamond Member
Jun 1, 2017
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Since Raven Ridge on 14LPP is in the 2000 range I expect the 12LP chips to use the 3000 range. And as burninatortech4 mentioned desktop APUs use the G suffix (there's also the S suffix for low power desktop APUs, and T for low power desktop CPUs).
 
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raghu78

Diamond Member
Aug 23, 2012
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14LPP had 3 options -

https://pc.watch.impress.co.jp/docs/column/kaigai/733713.html
https://pc.watch.impress.co.jp/img/pcw/docs/733/713/html/9.jpg.html

1. High Density (CPP=78nm,9T)
2. High Performance (CPP=84nm, 9T) and
3. Ultra High Performance (CPP=84nm, 10.5T)

AMD chose to go with High density for the first gen Zen die which was shared by client and server.

https://www.pcper.com/news/Processors/AMD-Details-Zen-ISCCC

A CPP of 78nm confirms Zen used High density libraries.

Pinnacle Ridge is a client only die built at 12LP. 12LP is an improved 14LPP node with transistor level enhancements. AMD has the choice to go for UHP libraries which has higher track height and larger CPP . We have to wait and see what AMD has done. But i think AMD might have gone for the max performance as they want to reduce the ST perf lead of Intel KBL and CFL.
 

richaron

Golden Member
Mar 27, 2012
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PCIe 4 would require a new socket. I expect both AMD and Intel to switch to it in 2020 or so. Along with DDR5.
Excuse my ignorance, but why would PCIe 4 require a new socket?

It's my understanding it will be hardware compatible with PCIe 3, and it's not like the chipset is the limiting factor when the PCIe controllers are baked into the CPU and hooked up directly to the PCIe slots.
 
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Shmee

Memory & Storage, Graphics Cards Mod Elite Member
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I am hoping for a good IPC/MHz increase, but mostly stronger memory controllers. I am hoping to "upgrade" my early 1700 for a faster (game wise) 6 core 2000 series.
 
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unseenmorbidity

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Nov 27, 2016
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Not enough of an upgrade to care about upgrading from ryzen imo. Ryzen 2, sure.
 
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Shmee

Memory & Storage, Graphics Cards Mod Elite Member
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Well, the thing is, I am not getting full performance out of my 1700, I don't think it likes the memory I got for it as it won't run at higher than 2666 MHz even with latest bios. I suppose I could just get some Bdie memory, but I got the 1700 before the 1600 was out, as I wanted to do an AMD build and try Ryzen. So it was an earlier chip, might not have a very good memory controller, and I do not need 8 cores for the ryzen rig, just 6 faster ones for games.
 
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IRobot23

Senior member
Jul 3, 2017
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IF isn't going to be touched. Slight chance of a better Memory controller and good chance for faster memory support.

Memory controller is already insanely good.
1. IF can/should be touched, we know that and main problem with ryzen is DF speed. We can see that IF speed help in gaming, so AMD must find solution to this problem (3:2 - IMC : F speed should help a lot). 2400MT/s - 1600MHz DF.

2. I don't know about you but Ryzen has good memory support already, but yes they can still improve it.


Next big thing worth upgrading will probably come with HBM on CPUs. If AMD can see GPU with 481mm^2 with 8GB of HBM for 400$ already, I can't see why CPU with ~200mm^2 16GB of HBM for 600-800$ would be impossible.

Since this thread is about next generation, I think AMD will improve memory latency (DF speed), improve support for higher clocks and thats it. We might be able to hit 60GB/s with Ryzen on dual channel. Like I said previously, APU is very interesting, since AMD has capable IMC.
 
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