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AMD Hardware

AMD Says Barcelona Will Outperform Clovertown 153

Dysfnctnl85 points out a ZDNet Blog posting in which AMD claims that its upcoming quad-core "Barcelona" chipset should be 40% faster than "Clovertown," Intel's quad-core Xeon 5300 line. AMD says that the introduction of Barcelona marks a shift in their strategy from emphasizing price to performance. The post goes on: "Intel is eager to claw back some of the server market share from AMD, and this is where Clovertown comes in... The Xeon 5300 line will represent excellent value for money since Intel plans on pricing them the same as its dual core Xeon 5100 processors. That could make things tough for AMD."
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AMD Says Barcelona Will Outperform Clovertown

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  • by namityadav ( 989838 ) on Saturday January 27, 2007 @08:05PM (#17786436)
    The way AMD and Intel are improving the processor speed is very impressive. I/O speed is going to become an even clearer bottleneck now.
    • I guess 4Gb FibreChannel, 2.5, 10 and 20Gb/s Infiniband aren't quite fast enough?

      I've managed storage for 15years and even within the largest datacenters very few host systems actually push their storage infrastructure. Most server admins say "I need linerate" b/c they have no idea how much data their applications will actually push. Plus it's a way to force the hba/hca/nic vendors to lower their prices.

      Btw: 80% of servers out there could run just perfectly fine with a pair of 1Gb/s fibrechannel HBAs.
      • The GP brought up the issue of pinched I/O bottlenecks at the processor bus, and you ramble off onto something related to connections to storage on servers.

        Clue: the whole world doesn't exist in 19" racks.
      • by fm6 ( 162816 )
        Believe it or not, very few desktops have that kind of technology.
      • by Anthony ( 4077 ) *
        Couldn't agree more with the majority of file server NAS/SAN solutions. On the other hand, high performance Data I/O such as media rendering, supercomputing applications, high-rate transactional database management needs as much bandwidth as possible (multi GB/sec).
    • Re: (Score:2, Redundant)

      by suv4x4 ( 956391 )
      The way AMD and Intel are improving the processor speed is very impressive. I/O speed is going to become an even clearer bottleneck now.

      Depends what you're using. I gotta say, I use PHP.. and I'm very happy with more cores coming on the server market, and CPU is quite clear bottleneck for that one technology :(
      • It really depends on what you're doing. Wikipedia, for example, serves a tremendous number of hits with PHP and a very minimal (for Wikipedia's size) server setup.

        Even a modest server should be able to hit ~ 100 pageviews/sec, depending on the database load and code complexity of your application.

        If you're doing something that requires code execution speed, you're probably better off looking at Java or possibly even ASP.NET.
        • by suv4x4 ( 956391 )
          If you're doing something that requires code execution speed, you're probably better off looking at Java or possibly even ASP.NET.

          Easy to say, hard to do. When you and your team have invested years in experience and reusable code in a certain platform/technology, it won't be good news to just, switch language to get extra performance.

          But faster CPU.. any time.
    • by Boone^ ( 151057 )
      I think you meant to say "memory". 1 core gets an entire set of DDR2 controllers. 4 cores get... to share the same set of DDR2 controllers.

      More cores per socket, but the socket's DDR2 bandwidth stays the same. Let's hope your kernels fit in the L2/L3.
    • by vadim_t ( 324782 )
      Unless you mean memory (where things don't look good ATM, as they seem to be expanding bandwidth but at the cost of adding latency), you might want to consider a flash drive.

      Flash has the advantage of having no seek latency, so even though I think current flash drives are slower than a hard disk as far as raw read/write speed is concerned, the seek latency cripples performance so much that a flash drive should be a massive improvement for most tasks. Most people don't do things like continously reading or w
    • ABout 8 years ago I was at at trade show and got jumped on by an Intel guy. We started chatting about future trends I said then I thought the PC had a huge disadvantage compared to mini's in terms of i/.o and he looked shifty and started to mumble a bit then eventually said 'yes, we know and we're working very hard on a totally new i/o system for PC's. Given the time, it may well have just been what we now have but at least they were aware that fast CPU's are worth nothing if they're waiting for the data.
  • by Original Replica ( 908688 ) on Saturday January 27, 2007 @08:08PM (#17786462) Journal
    Everyone know that in Barcelona they take Ciesta. So don't plan on using you computer between noon and 1.
    • by macadamia_harold ( 947445 ) on Saturday January 27, 2007 @08:49PM (#17786772) Homepage
      Everyone know that in Barcelona they take Ciesta. So don't plan on using you computer between noon and 1.

      Yeah, but if it's 40% faster, an hour-long siesta should only 35 minutes.
    • by kfg ( 145172 )
      Dude, noon to 1 is a lunch hour, not a siesta. The system will be down between 2 and 5; or maybe between 1 and 6 if some Ambar Negra gets into it.

      KFG
    • by 12357bd ( 686909 )
      Better Siesta and between noon and 5! :)
    • by fm6 ( 162816 )

      Yes, but in Clovertown they only computer when they're done with the milking...

      Come to think of it, is Clovertown a real place? It's my understanding that Intel and AMD uses geographic codenames to avoid litigation [wikipedia.org]. So there must be a real place called Clovertown. Except Wikipedia (which is compulsive [wikipedia.org] about dumping geographic databases) doesn't have anything.

  • upcoming chipset? (Score:4, Insightful)

    by aczisny ( 871332 ) on Saturday January 27, 2007 @08:11PM (#17786484)

    FTFS:

    "Barcelona" chipset should be 40% faster than "Clovertown,"

    You'd think since the blog got right that Barcelona is the upcoming processor from AMD, and since Clovertown is a processor codename from Intel, that the summary could have gotten it right too. Do submitters not read the articles either anymore?

  • by j. andrew rogers ( 774820 ) on Saturday January 27, 2007 @08:34PM (#17786664)
    Whether AMD or Intel is producing the fastest, cheapest, most scalable, or most efficient processor at the moment is not terribly important.

    What *is* important is that when you have two companies in genuine fierce competition at the bleeding edge of technology and performance, they extract an impressive amount of productivity and effort out of their engineering and science assets. Free markets are at their best when all the major players have a healthy fear of the capabilities of their competitors.
    • by Anonymous Coward

      ...if there was a similar competition in the OS market. You wouldn't need these mammoth processors in the first place. And having one would be a huge benefit, not a marginal one.

      • by jadavis ( 473492 )
        ...if there was a similar competition in the OS market. You wouldn't need these mammoth processors in the first place

        What makes you say that? What makes you think that there are the same kind of performance gains possible from an OS? What makes you think there is not competition?
      • by drsmithy ( 35869 )

        You wouldn't need these mammoth processors in the first place. And having one would be a huge benefit, not a marginal one.

        And you base this on what, exactly ?

  • AMD is growing (Score:3, Interesting)

    by adambha ( 1048538 ) on Saturday January 27, 2007 @08:35PM (#17786668) Homepage

    AMD says that the introduction of Barcelona marks a shift in their strategy from emphasizing price to performance.

    While there are arguments both positive and negative toward the (somewhat) recent AMD/Dell alliance, this is one more indication that AMD is making even more progress in the processor market. Once considered the 'most bang for your buck' AMD is truly making a name for itself as a formidable competitor.

    One of the fundamental principles of capitalism is that competition spurs growth and progress. This is a case in point.

    • While there are arguments both positive and negative toward the (somewhat) recent AMD/Dell alliance, this is one more indication that AMD is making even more progress in the processor market. Once considered the 'most bang for your buck' AMD is truly making a name for itself as a formidable competitor.

      Actually, the way I remember history, AMD has only been "most bank for your buck" when it wasn't "best bang, period." As soon as it took the performance crown, an AMD computer (as in, once you also add the mo

      • Re: (Score:3, Informative)

        by 2ms ( 232331 )
        Then you must be new. AMD has basically been outperforming Intel ever since the 1.13Ghz PIII debacle. By Thunderbird and Thoroughbred in particular, AMD was outperforming the PIVs at about half the price. It wasn't until AMD64 that AMD started charging Intel prices. That's at least four years where AMD equaled or beat Intel performance for drastically less money (on the order of 50% price and often times less).
  • All Intel has to do is turn up the clock the day before Barcelona ships. We already know that the Core 2 Duo chips are very overclockable, and getting another 40% -- or even 50%+ out of them -- shouldn't be a problem.

    In fact I'll go further and say that buying any Intel (in my opinion, you fsking lawyers) before Barcelona launches is a Bad Move. It's seldom that performance increases by 50% in a calender year any more, as Mr. Steve Jobs found out a couple years back. This is not like the days when a 48

    • I think the overclockability is in part due to the fact that Intel likes to have generous safety margins. It might also be that going beyond a certain level goes above their power consumption rating. Increasing the clock would mean reducing those margins.
      • It may be partially because of yield, but when essentially all parts are overclockable ... it starts to smell fishy.

        I've had two C2D processors [E6300 and E6600] and both were massively overclockable [1.83GHz => 2.94GHz and 2.4GHz => 3.42GHz respectively] with stable results. The only actual flakey part of the equation was the hot northbridge. If they upped the multipliers in the chips from 9 to 12 I suspect most E6600s, for instance, would be fine. Something tells me in the near future we'll see a
        • I've had two C2D processors [E6300 and E6600] and both were massively overclockable [1.83GHz => 2.94GHz and 2.4GHz => 3.42GHz respectively] with stable results.

          I haven't done any overclocking with more recent processors, partly due to limitations in the motherboards I currently use... but I do remember a few years ago clocking my PIII 800 to over 1 GHz. I also remember the old Celeron 300a being widely known as overclockable, with some batches going as high as 466 MHz (more than 50% over the rated spe
    • by be-fan ( 61476 ) on Saturday January 27, 2007 @08:56PM (#17786806)
      All Intel has to do is turn up the clock the day before Barcelona ships. We already know that the Core 2 Duo chips are very overclockable, and getting another 40% -- or even 50%+ out of them -- shouldn't be a problem.

      The performance a chip can get with overclocking is way higher than what the manufacturer can deliver in final products. They have to be highly reliable at their specified clockspeed with (relatively) poor cooling, and while meeting the given voltage and thermal dissipation specifications. I've seen the Core 2 over-clock to 3.5 GHz (with conventional cooling) online, but how many of those are doing it at the stock Vcore while staying within the 65 watt TDP?
      • but how many of those are doing it at the stock Vcore while staying within the 65 watt TDP?

        You're assuming that Intel absolutely has to stay within those parameters. Expect them to step outside them the moment competitive advantage requires it. And they only have to do it with a few EE chips to claim the crown again.

        • by TheThiefMaster ( 992038 ) on Saturday January 27, 2007 @09:50PM (#17787088)
          We are talking a SERVER line of cpus here. EE chips are a desktop cpu brand.

          For servers TDP is incredibly important, because server rooms are air-conditioned, a room full of higher TDP cpus costs much much much more to run from an electricity point of view.

          That's not to say that they won't overstep their vcore or TDP limits to get the upper hand on performance, but that wouldn't win them the performance/watt ratio crown that's the all-important stat for server cpus.
        • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

          by be-fan ( 61476 )
          The TDP and voltage levels are part of the platform specification. Intel can't just up them without requiring motherboards, cooling units, etc, to be upgraded to handle the new spec. They might get away with it for some consumer level stuff, but not in the server market where Clovertown and Barcelona are competing. The server folks are going to want some substantial lead-time to rejigger everything to meet higher TDP and Vcore specs.
        • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

          Expect them to step outside them the moment competitive advantage requires it.

          That would be, eight or twelve years ago. Or is it next year? Or do the facts show that they know they'd be creamed, and the PR disaster would make the Pentium floating point bug look like a company picnic?

          Personally, I think they know more about what they're doing than some overclockers. Have you ever read an Intel datasheet? Have you ever read ANY IC datasheet?

  • by trimbo ( 127919 ) on Saturday January 27, 2007 @08:42PM (#17786718) Homepage
    Unless AMD employs completely incompetent morons as engineers, of course "Barcelona" should be faster than "Clovertown". Clovertown was released half a year to a year before Barcelona.

    The tables have turned. Even though Clovertown is not a "true" quad-core (aka a single die), Intel has a huge head start on AMD on quad core. Intel will be pushing forward with their 45nm technology and pushing out yet more models by the time these arrive. With their fabrication prowess, I would expect the gap to increase over AMD. Since dumping NetBurst, Intel is finally battling AMD in an sport they can potentially win.
    • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

      Intel still has the FSB and that will get the way of the making the chips faster and add more IO.
      Havening 2 dual-cores linked by a fsb bus will get in the way even faster as the speed of the cpu gets higher.
      And a 4 cpu quad-core sever will likely choke up at the chipset to ram link as well as the chipset to chipset link.

      Also intels dael quad-core workstation and the V8 only haves has the pci-e lanes for 1 x16 slot and the 8 other ones are used for the chipset to chipset link amd based ones will blow it away
      • While all the technical reasons you listed are valid when looking towards future products, it is naive to think that Intel hasn't seen the same things you have. Intel does not employ stupid people (or at least for very long), so Intel will most likely have very good solutions to those problems by the time they are needed.
        • Like say... RAMBUS? Or maybe Monterey?

          Intel does in fact do very stupid things from time to time. The question is, is this one of them?
          • Eh, everyone makes mistakes. Rambus is a great example of a something that sounded good in the begining, then quickly took a turn in the wrong direction. But as long as people (and companies) learn from their mistakes, they won't repeat them in the future.
      • Where the hell are the spelling and grammar Nazis when you need them?

        For once, they might legitimately be able to make this post more easily comprehensible.
      • by Sj0 ( 472011 )
        With AMDs Hammer platform, every new processor adds a hypertransport link, increasing memory bandwidth. I haven't paid any attention for 5 years and even *I* know that.
  • by sarathmenon ( 751376 ) <{moc.nonemhtaras} {ta} {mrs}> on Saturday January 27, 2007 @08:57PM (#17786814) Homepage Journal
    I am a sysadmin, and I've seen super weight systems taxed to the extreme. The best servers don't boast of the fastest clock speed; they have the best i/o buses, tight integration of the hardware and software, and more importantly, reliability. These are the reasons I've seen that amd makes a better choice than Intel. Intel is all about FUD, increasing the clock speed at any cost and in general, very unreliable systems that act strangely when pushed under heavy processor load.

    I'd choose AMD over intel anyday - i've liked their strategies always, and in the server arena they are the best x86 player. But the bottom line still remains, sun's sparc line,ibm's ppc one and hp's rule. They have been in the business for quite some time, and they frankly know what they are doing.

    Intel, its not late to figure out the economics. Corporations choose the best machine for the job while running their servers. No one chooses cheap when they are shopping for their new database server. The big bucks are in the hell expensive servers, and not in the mom-and-pop line. You can sell 1,00,000 cheap servers instead of 1000 expensive ones. But the margins are higher ony in the latter.
    • I think you have a good point about other architectures. The problem with your post is, I have never had any problem with the reliability of Intel-based systems, even when running Windows, and even running dual Xeon systems running Netburst chips, my computers have been running cool and quietly. That, and Intel isn't necessarily about the highest clock anymore. I don't know if you've noticed, but they aren't promoting Netburst anymore either.
  • Mainly in FP (Score:5, Informative)

    by Visaris ( 553352 ) on Saturday January 27, 2007 @09:54PM (#17787100) Journal
    This 40% faster than Clovertown claim is only referring to FP code. The integer side is not nearly as clear. Expect AMD to improve integer performance over K8, but I don't expect any miracles. Here is a small list of improvements Barcelona will have over K8:

    - Double L1 cache bandwidth
    - Double FP units
    - Single-cycle SSE (vs K8's 2-cycle)
    - More fast-path decoding
    - Double TLB size
    - Independent DDR channels
    - More cache (L3)
    - Out-of-Order loads
    - New instructions (LZCNT, POPCNT, EXTRQ/INSERTQ, MOVNTSD/MOVNTSS)
    - Double prefetch (from 16 bytes -> 32 bytes)
    - Larger Branch Target Buffer
    - Larger Out of Order (OoO) buffers
    - Support for new HT standard (3.0)

    • Re:Mainly in FP (Score:5, Insightful)

      by Erich ( 151 ) on Sunday January 28, 2007 @12:39AM (#17787788) Homepage Journal

      New instructions (LZCNT, POPCNT, EXTRQ/INSERTQ, MOVNTSD/MOVNTSS)

      Interesting!

      I can't find much information on it, but I'm guessing "LZCNT" is count-leading-zeros. This is like "find-first-one" from the other direction. It's very useful for things like finding the magnitude of an unsigned numbers. It's used quite often on architectures without FPUs (like ARM) in floating point routines for renormalization. I guess it could also be useful if you are having to do floating point emulation for numbers with enourmous precision.

      I guess if you have "BSR" then LZCNT = -BSR

      POPCNT is probably population count, the number of 1s in a value.

      Both LZCNT and POPCNT are instructions that are a pain to do in software if you lack the instruction in the hardware, and they are relatively cheap (especially if you have BSF/BSR already).

      I'm still a bit suprised that there aren't a few more of these bit-banging instructions in x86, like bit interleave/deinterleave and bit reverse. Modern processors are doing enough signal processing work that one would think you'd thow the tools in the bucket, as cheap as they are. I guess lookup tables are good enough.

      What's the over/under for which SSE revision will add a galois field multiplier? 7? 8?

      But seriously, the dual ported caches are probably the best improvement for most people. You can't be too rich, too thin, or have too much memory bandwitdth.

      It looks like AMD has done the same thing Intel did with "Core 2"... just take a good architecture and keep making improvements... more issue width, more memory bandwidth, more flexibility in scheduling. Every bit counts.

      I think we're getting to a similar point in modern CPU microarchitectures to where we are in some other industries, where drastic improvements are much more rare and it all comes down to really great implementation... like making engines. There are some innovative ideas for engines, and certainly a lot of people experiment, but really the best designs are just really well balanced and tuned. (although more cylinders is usually a good thing for horsepower).

  • Obvious (Score:3, Funny)

    by Mazin07 ( 999269 ) on Saturday January 27, 2007 @11:14PM (#17787380) Homepage
    Jeez, of course AMD's right. Take a look:

    Population of Barcelona: 1,673,075 [wikipedia.org]
    Population of Clovertown [google.com]: 5601 [census.gov] (or less)

    Barcelona is vastly superior.
  • by suv4x4 ( 956391 ) on Saturday January 27, 2007 @11:55PM (#17787580)
    Intel's quad-core Xeon 5300 line. AMD says that the introduction of Barcelona marks a shift in their strategy from emphasizing price to performance

    The way they spun it, you can also claim they changed their strategy from slow to expensive.
  • by ColaMan ( 37550 )
    My .sig says it all, really.

    I must be getting old. Once upon a time, I drooled over a P90 and how much faster it was compared to my DX2-66.
    Now, it's just a feeble wave of the index finger and a sarcastic, "Processors are getting incrementally faster? woo-hoo."
  • Is anyone else sick of seeing chip makers try to speculate about the merits and performance capabilities of major metropolitain areas? As if anyone could outperform a people with the power of clovers on their side!
  • AMD also claimed they were going to release a 35W version of their AM2 3800 processor last June, but as of yet it's still not available at any retailer. Only 7 months late so far! So, take what they claim with a large grain of salt...
  • ...but will it boil water as quickly as the (120 watt!) clovertown?

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