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Unprecedented 804MB cache! AMD Enhanced Zen3 processor actually tested

In November 2021, AMD officially launched a new version of the Zen3 processor, adding 3D V-Cache caching technology for the first time, of which the desktop version is the Ryzen 7 5800X3D, with an increase of 64MB cache, and the server version is the Milan-X Xiaolong series, with an additional 512MB cache.

Specifically, the Milan 7003 series originally had up to eight small chips inside, each with 32MB of L3 cache, for a total of 256MB.

The Milan-X 7003X series has an additional 64MB of L3 cache stacked on each chiplet, for a total of 512MB.

If you count the 4MB L1 cache and 32MB L2 cache, a 64-core Dragon has a terrifying 804MB cache, and the two-way is almost 1.6GB!

Unprecedented 804MB cache! AMD Enhanced Zen3 processor actually tested

According to AMD's tests, more cache can greatly reduce the pressure on system memory bandwidth, and the same 16-core Milan-X, Milan, Synopsys VCS measured EDA RTL verification workloads, performance increased by up to 66%.

So what is the actual performance? The biggest worry about increasing the external L3 cache is still latency, in response to this problem, there have been overseas netizens to do a cache delay test, compared with the normal version of the Milan 7003 series processor and Milan-X 7003X series processor.

Unprecedented 804MB cache! AMD Enhanced Zen3 processor actually tested
Unprecedented 804MB cache! AMD Enhanced Zen3 processor actually tested

Whether it is the absolute latency time in the above figure or the latency period in the following figure, the Milan-X 7003X series with 2x L3 cache performs very well, only adding 3-4 cycles, which is very amazing.

They will have very detailed tests in the future, but from the perspective of latency, AMD's 3D V-Cache technology is full of surprises, and the external 2x cache does not bring exaggerated latency.

Although the test is still the server version of the Milan-X 7003X series processor, but the desktop version of the Ryzen 7 5800X3D only added a set of 64MB cache, theoretically the delay performance is better, can offset the impact of frequency reduction, in some cache-eating games should have a surprise performance, AMD officially said that the average performance of 15%, up to 40% performance improvement.

Unprecedented 804MB cache! AMD Enhanced Zen3 processor actually tested

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