NVIDIA Tegra X1 Preview & Architecture Analysis
by Joshua Ho & Ryan Smith on January 5, 2015 1:00 AM EST- Posted in
- SoCs
- Arm
- Project Denver
- Mobile
- 20nm
- GPUs
- Tablets
- NVIDIA
- Cortex A57
- Tegra X1
GPU Performance Benchmarks
As part of today’s announcement of the Tegra X1, NVIDIA also gave us a short opportunity to benchmark the X1 reference platform under controlled circumstances. In this case NVIDIA had several reference platforms plugged in and running, pre-loaded with various benchmark applications. The reference platforms themselves had a simple heatspreader mounted on them, intended to replicate the ~5W heat dissipation capabilities of a tablet.
The purpose of this demonstration was two-fold. First to showcase that X1 was up and running and capable of NVIDIA’s promised features. The second reason was to showcase the strong GPU performance of the platform. Meanwhile NVIDIA also had an iPad Air 2 on hand for power testing, running Apple’s latest and greatest SoC, the A8X. NVIDIA has made it clear that they consider Apple the SoC manufacturer to beat right now, as A8X’s PowerVR GX6850 GPU is the fastest among the currently shipping SoCs.
It goes without saying that the results should be taken with an appropriate grain of salt until we can get Tegra X1 back to our labs. However we have seen all of the testing first-hand and as best as we can tell NVIDIA’s tests were sincere.
NVIDIA Tegra X1 Controlled Benchmarks | |||||
Benchmark | A8X (AT) | K1 (AT) | X1 (NV) | ||
BaseMark X 1.1 Dunes (Offscreen) | 40.2fps | 36.3fps | 56.9fps | ||
3DMark 1.2 Unlimited (Graphics Score) | 31781 | 36688 | 58448 | ||
GFXBench 3.0 Manhattan 1080p (Offscreen) | 32.6fps | 31.7fps | 63.6fps |
For benchmarking NVIDIA had BaseMark X 1.1, 3DMark Unlimited 1.2 and GFXBench 3.0 up and running. Our X1 numbers come from the benchmarks we ran as part of NVIDIA’s controlled test, meanwhile the A8X and K1 numbers come from our Mobile Bench.
NVIDIA’s stated goal with X1 is to (roughly) double K1’s GPU performance, and while these controlled benchmarks for the most part don’t make it quite that far, X1 is still a significant improvement over K1. NVIDIA does meet their goal under Manhattan, where performance is almost exactly doubled, meanwhile 3DMark and BaseMark X increased by 59% and 56% respectively.
Finally, for power testing NVIDIA had an X1 reference platform and an iPad Air 2 rigged to measure the power consumption from the devices’ respective GPU power rails. The purpose of this test was to showcase that thanks to X1’s energy optimizations that X1 is capable of delivering the same GPU performance as the A8X GPU while drawing significantly less power; in other words that X1’s GPU is more efficient than A8X’s GX6850. Now to be clear here these are just GPU power measurements and not total platform power measurements, so this won’t account for CPU differences (e.g. A57 versus Enhanced Cyclone) or the power impact of LPDDR4.
Top: Tegra X1 Reference Platform. Bottom: iPad Air 2
For power testing NVIDIA ran Manhattan 1080p (offscreen) with X1’s GPU underclocked to match the performance of the A8X at roughly 33fps. Pictured below are the average power consumption (in watts) for the X1 and A8X respectively.
NVIDIA’s tools show the X1’s GPU averages 1.51W over the run of Manhattan. Meanwhile the A8X’s GPU averages 2.67W, over a watt more for otherwise equal performance. This test is especially notable since both SoCs are manufactured on the same TSMC 20nm SoC process, which means that any performance differences between the two devices are solely a function of energy efficiency.
There are a number of other variables we’ll ultimately need to take into account here, including clockspeeds, relative die area of the GPU, and total platform power consumption. But assuming NVIDIA’s numbers hold up in final devices, X1’s GPU is looking very good out of the gate – at least when tuned for power over performance.
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juicytuna - Monday, January 5, 2015 - link
Well said. Apple's advantage is parallel development and time to market. Their GPU architecture is not that much *better* than their competitors. In fact I'd say that Nvidia has had a significant advantage when it comes to feature set and performance per watt on a given process node since the K1.GC2:CS - Monday, January 5, 2015 - link
Maybe an adventage in feature set, but performance per watt ?So if you want to compare than For example xiaomi miPad, consumes around 7,9W, when running gfx bench battery life test and that is with performance throttled down to around 30,4 fps on screen a very similar tablet, the iPad mini with retina display and it's A7 processor (actually a 28nm part !) consumes just 4,3W and that is running at 22,9 fps for the whole time.
So I am asking where is that "class leading" efficiency and "significant adventage when it comes to performace per watt" that nvidia is claiming to achieve, because I actually don't see anything like that.
Yojimbo - Monday, January 5, 2015 - link
Looking at the gfxbench website, under "long-term performance" I see 21.4 fps listed for the iPad Mini Retina and 30.4 fps listed for the Mi Pad, maybe this is what you are talking about. That is a roughly 40% advantage in performance for the Mi Pad. I can't find anything that says about throttling or the number of Watts being drawn during this test. What I do see is another category listed immediately below that says "battery lifetime" where the iPad Mini Retina is listed at 303 minutes and the Mi Pad is listed at 193 minutes. The iPad Mini Retina has a 23.8 watt-hour battery and the Mi Pad has a 24.7 watt-hour battery. So this seems to imply that the iPad Mini Retina is drawing about 4.7 watts and the Mi Pad is drawing about 7.7 watts, and it comes out to the Mi Pad using about a 63% more power. 40% more performance for 63% more power is a much closer race than the numbers you quoted (Yours come out to about a 33% increase in performance and an 84% increase in power consumption, which is very different.), and one must remember the circumstances of the comparison. Firstly, it is a comparison at different performance levels (this part is fair, since juicytuna claimed that NVIDIA has had a performance per watt advantage), secondly, it is a long-term performance comparison for a particularly testing methodology, and lastly and most importantly, it is a whole-system comparison, not just comparing the GPU power consumption or even the SOC power consumption.GC2:CS - Monday, January 5, 2015 - link
Yeah exactly, when you got two similar platforms with different chips, I think it's safe to say that tegra pulls significally more than A7, because those ~3 additional wats (I don't know where you got your numbers, I know xiaomi got 25,46Wh, and that iPad lasts 330 minutes, A7 iPad's also push out T-rex at around 23 fps since iOS8 update) have to go somewhere. What I am trying to say that imagine how low powered the A7 is if the entire iPad mini at half brightness consumes 4,7W, how huge those 3W that more or less come from the SoC actually are.You will increase the power draw of the entire tablet by over a half, just to get 40% more performance out of your SoC. The tegra K1 in miPad has a 5W TDP, or more than entire iPad mini ! Yet it can't deliver performance that's competitive enough at that power.
Like you are a 140 lb man, that can lift a 100 pounds, but you will train a lot untill you will put on 70 pounds of muscles (pump more power intro the soc) to weight 210 or more and you could still only lift like 140 pounds. What a dissapointment !
What I see is a massive increase in power compustion, with not-so massive gains in performace, which is not typical to efficient architectures like nvidia is claiming Tegra k1 is.
That's why I think nvidia just kind of failed to deliver on their promise of "revolution" in mobile graphics.
Yojimbo - Monday, January 5, 2015 - link
I got my benchmark and battery life numbers from the gfxbench.com website as I said in my reply. I got the iPad's battery capacity from the Apple website. I got the Mi Pad's battery capacity from a review page that I can't find again right now, but looking from other places it may have been wrong. WCCFtech lists 25.46 W-h like you did. I don't know where you got YOUR numbers. You cannot say they are "two similar platforms" and conclude that the comparison is a fair comparison of the underlying SOCs. Yes the screen resolutions are the same, but just imagine that Apple managed to squeeze an extra .5 watts from the display, memory, and all other parts of the system than the "foolish chinesse manufacteurs (sic)" were able to do. Adding this hypothetical .5 watts back would put the iPad Mini Retina at 5.2 watts, and the Mi Pad would then be operating at 40% more performance for 48% (or 52%, using the larger battery size you gave for the MiPad) more power usage . Since power usage does not scale linearly with performance this could potentially be considered an excellent trade-off.Your analogy, btw, is terrible. The Mi Pad does not have the same performance as does the bulked-up man in your analogy, it has a whole 40% more. Your use of inexact words to exaggerate is also annoying: "I see massive increases in power compustion, with not-so massive gains in performace"and "You increase the power draw by over half just to get 40% more performance". You increase the power by 60% to get 40% more performance. That has all the information. But the important point is that it is not an SOC-only measurement and so the numbers are very non-conclusive from an analytical standpoint.
GC2:CS - Tuesday, January 6, 2015 - link
What I see from those numbers is a fact that Tegra is nowhere near 50% more efficient than A7 like nvidia is claiming.When Gfx bench battery life test runs the display and the SoC are two major power drawers so I thought is reasonable to make other power using parts neglible.
So the entire iPad mini pulls 4,9W (I don't know why I should add another 0,5 W if it doesn't pull that much) and miPad pulls 7,9W. Those are your numbers which actually favor nvidia a bit.
To show you that there is no way around that fact I will lower the compustion of miPad by a W just to favor nvidia even more.
Now when we got 4,9 and 6,9W for both tablets I will substract around 1,5W for the display power, which should be more or less the same for both tablets.
So we got 3,4 and 5,4W of all things but the display power compustion, and most of this will be the SoC power. And we got that the tegra k1 uses more or less 50% more power than A7 for 40% more performance in a scenario that favors nvidia so much it's extremelly unfair.
And even if we take this absurd scenario and scale back the power compustion of tegra K1 down quadratically: 1,5*(1,4)^(-2) we still get that even at A7 level of performance K1 will consume over 75% power of A7 for the same performance.
That is an number that is way, way, way off in favor of nvidia and yet it still doesn't come close to "50% more efficient" claim that would require the K1 to consume just 2/3 the power for the same performance.
So please tell me how can you assume that increasing the power draw of the ENTIRE tablet by 60%, just to get 40% more GPU performance out of your SoC, which is a SINGLE part, just a subset of total tablet power draw, can be interpreted as nvidia's SoC is more efficient. Because whatever I will spin that I am not seeing 3x performance and 50% more efficiency from K1 tablets compared to A7 tablets. I see that that K1 tablets throttle to nowhere near 3x faster than A7 iPads and they run down their battery significally faster. And if the same is true for the tegra X1, I don't know why anybody should be excited about those chips.
Yojimbo - Tuesday, January 6, 2015 - link
You don't think it's possible to save power in any other component of the system than the SOC? I think that's a convenient and silly claim. You can't operate under the assumption that the rest of the two very different systems draw the exact same amount of power and so all power difference comes from the SOC. Obviously if you want to compare SOC power draw you look at SOC power draw. Anything else is prone to great error. You can do lots of very exact and careful calculations and you will probably be completely inaccurate.juicytuna - Monday, January 5, 2015 - link
That's comparing whole SOC power consumption. There's now doubt Cyclone is a much more efficient architecture than A15/A7. Do we know how much this test stresses the CPU? Can it run entirely on the A7s or is it lighting up all 4 A15s? Not enough data.Furthermore, the performance/watt curve on these chips is non linear so if the K1 was downclocked to match the performance of the iPad I've no doubt its results would look much more favourable. I suspect that is why they compare the X1 to the A8X at same FPS rather than at the same power consumption.
Jumangi - Monday, January 5, 2015 - link
No it should be done on the actual real world products people can buy. That's the only thing that should matter ever.Yojimbo - Monday, January 5, 2015 - link
Not if one wants to compare architectures, no. There is no reason why in an alternate universe Apple doesn't use NVIDIA's GPU instand of IMG's. In this alternate universe, NVIDIA's K1 GPU would then benefit from Apple's advantages the same way the Series 6XT GPU benefits in the Apple 8X, and then the supposed point that GC2:CS is trying to make, that the K1 is inherently inferior, would, I think, not hold up.