Dominating Mobile Performance

Before we dig deeper into the x86 vs Apple Silicon debate, it would be useful to look into more detail how the A14 Firestorm cores have improved upon the A13 Lightning cores, as well as detail the power and power efficiency improvements of the new chip’s 5nm process node.

The process node is actually quite the wildcard in the comparisons here as the A14 is the first 5nm chipset on the market, closely followed by Huawei’s Kirin 9000 in the Mate 40 series. We happen to have both devices and chips in house for testing, and contrasting the Kirin 9000 (Cortex-A77 3.13GHz on N5) vs the Snapdragon 865+ (Cortex-A77 3.09GHz on N7P) we can somewhat deduct how much of an impact the process node has in terms of power and efficiency, translating those improvements to the A13 vs A14 comparison.

Starting off with SPECint2006, we don’t see anything very unusual about the A14 scores, save the great improvement in 456.hmmer. Actually, this wasn’t due to a microarchitectural jump, but rather due to new optimisations on the part of the new LLVM version in Xcode 12. It seems here that the compiler has employed a similar loop optimisation as found on GCC8 onwards. The A13 score actually had improved from 47.79 to 64.87, but I hadn’t run new numbers on the whole suite yet.

For the rest of the workloads, the A14 generally looks like a relatively linear progression from the A13 in terms of progression, accounting for the clock frequency increase from 2.66GHz to 3GHz. The overall IPC gains for the suite look to be around 5% which is a bit less than Apple’s prior generations, though with a larger than usual clock speed increase.

Power consumption for the new chip is actually in line, and sometimes even better than the A13, which means that workload energy efficiency this generation has seen a noticeable improvement even at the peak performance point.

Performance against the contemporary Android and Cortex-core powered SoCs looks to be quite lopsided in favour of Apple. The one thing that stands out the most are the memory-intensive, sparse memory characterised workloads such as 429.mcf and 471.omnetpp where the Apple design features well over twice the performance, even though all the chip is running similar mobile-grade LPDDR4X/LPDDR5 memory. In our microarchitectural investigations we’ve seen signs of “memory magic” on Apple’s designs, where we might believe they’re using some sort of pointer-chase prefetching mechanism.

In SPECfp, the increases of the A14 over the A13 are a little higher than the linear clock frequency increase, as we’re measuring an overall 10-11% IPC uplift here. This isn’t too surprising given the additional fourth FP/SIMD pipeline of the design, whereas the integer side of the core has remained relatively unchanged compared to the A13.

In the overall mobile comparison, we can see that the new A14 has made robust progress in terms of increasing performance over the A13. Compared to the competition, Apple is well ahead of the pack – we’ll have to wait for next year’s Cortex-X1 devices to see the gap narrow again.

What’s also very important to note here is that Apple has achieved this all whilst remaining flat, or even lowering the power consumption of the new chip, notably reducing energy consumption for the same workloads.

Looking at the Kirin 9000 vs the Snapdragon 865+, we’re seeing a 10% reduction in power at relatively similar performance. Both chips use the same CPU IP, only differing in their process node and implementations. It seems Apple’s A14 here has been able to achieve better figures than just the process node improvement, which is expected given that it’s a new microarchitecture design as well.

One further note is the data of the A14’s small efficiency cores. This generation we saw a large microarchitectural boost on the part of these new cores which are now seeing 35% better performance versus last year’s A13 efficiency cores – all while further reducing energy consumption. I don’t know how the small cores will come into play on Apple’s “Apple Silicon” Mac designs, but they’re certainly still very performant and extremely efficient compared to other current contemporary Arm designs.

Lastly, there’s the x86 vs Apple performance comparison. Usually for iPhone reviews I comment on this in this section of the article, but given today’s context and the goals Apple has made for Apple Silicon, let’s investigate that into a whole dedicated section…

Apple's Humongous CPU Microarchitecture From Mobile to Mac: What to Expect?
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  • Spunjji - Thursday, November 12, 2020 - link

    Did you even skim through the SPEC benchmark sections here, or..?
  • SarahKerrigan - Tuesday, November 10, 2020 - link

    Look at Anandtech's benchmarks in this article. What "performance lost" are you seeing?
  • BlackHat - Tuesday, November 10, 2020 - link

    Those benchmarks are for performance per watt, are very efficiency yes, it doesn't mean very powerful, the MacBook Pro is supposed to be for heavy workloads but Appel compare this chips against a i7 SkyLake U, that don't give me a lot of good vibe, but we will have to wait for the bechmarks.
  • SarahKerrigan - Tuesday, November 10, 2020 - link

    No. They aren't. I'm not talking about Apple's numbers. I'm talking about Anandtech's numbers, on the fourth page of this very article, based on tests they ran themselves on the A14, which show the A14 generally exceeding Tiger Lake ST perf.
  • BlackHat - Tuesday, November 10, 2020 - link

    And that is why this article should have that in account, why Apple is claiming less performance than the bechmarks runs here? Maybe I missing something, I trying to understand.
  • ikjadoon - Tuesday, November 10, 2020 - link

    Exactly. Why on Earth should anyone care about Apple's marketing, Apple's benchmarks, or Apple's comparisons...when Andrei, Ryan & Anandtech have *tested* *independent* *benchmarks*?

    Firestorm is the fastest perf/W general computing uarch in the world & on the latest 5nm TSMC node, what ... else do people want?

    Companies sandbag performance *ALL* the time.
  • BlackHat - Tuesday, November 10, 2020 - link

    Companies sandbagging performance? Sorry but that last time that I checked all of them put heir products on the best light posible, Apple could have said: our new chips are as powerful or more powerful than the last generation MacBook (Ice Lake models) but they said of the world, ignoring Ice Lake, Tiger Lake or Renoir.
  • Andrei Frumusanu - Tuesday, November 10, 2020 - link

    What's your problem here? We benchmarked the A14 being faster than every other chip out there except the Zen3 parts. You do realise this is a 5 page article?
  • BlackHat - Tuesday, November 10, 2020 - link

    Sorry I'm not trying to be a troll or something, it just that you said that you don't know against what chip Apple compared this products so you said that you your supposition is that are against the lastest chips but Apple footnotes show that they are comparing against the 2 olds SkyLake version MacBook, which is odds when they have theses numbers that you show here.
  • mmrezaie - Tuesday, November 10, 2020 - link

    They have compared it to the latest and greatest. What else can we expect from them? I think they have done the best possible so far.

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