Intel 3rd Gen Xeon Scalable (Ice Lake SP) Review: Generationally Big, Competitively Small
by Andrei Frumusanu on April 6, 2021 11:00 AM EST- Posted in
- Servers
- CPUs
- Intel
- Xeon
- Enterprise
- Xeon Scalable
- Ice Lake-SP
Section by Ian Cutress
Ice Lake Xeon Processor List
Intel is introducing around 40 new processors across the Xeon Platinum (8300 series), Xeon Gold (6300 and 5300 series) and Xeon Silver (4300 series). Xeon Bronze no longer exists with Ice Lake. Much like the previous generation, the 8/6/5/4 segmentation signifies the series, and the 3 indicates the generation. Beyond that the two digits are somewhat meaningless as before.
That being said, there is a significant change. In the past, Platinum/Gold/Silver also indicated socket support, with Platinum supporting up to 8P configurations. This time around, as Ice Lake does not support 8P, all the processors will support only up to 2P, with a few select models being uniprocessor only. This makes the Platinum/Gold/Silver segmentation arbitrary, if only to indicate what sort of performance/price bracket the processors are in.
On top of this, Intel is adding in more suffixes to the equation. If you work with Xeon Scalable processors day in and day out, there is now a need to differentiate the Q processor from a P processor, and an S processor from an M processor. There’s a handy list down below.
SKU List
The easiest way with this is to jump into the deep end with the processor list. RCP stands for recommended customer price, and SGX GB stands for how large Software Guard Extension enclaves can be – either 8 GB, 64 GB, or 512 GB. Cells highlighted in green show highlights in the stack.
Intel 3rd Gen Xeon Scalable Ice Lake Xeon Only |
||||||||||
AnandTech | Cores w/HT |
Base Freq |
1T Freq |
nT Freq |
L3 MB |
TDP W |
SGX GB |
RCP 1ku |
DC PMM |
|
Xeon Platinum (8x DDR4-3200) | ||||||||||
8380 | 40 | 2300 | 3400 | 3000 | 60 | 270 | 512 | $8099 | Yes | |
8368 | Q | 38 | 2600 | 3700 | 3300 | 57 | 270 | 512 | $6743 | Yes |
8368 | 38 | 2400 | 3400 | 3200 | 57 | 270 | 512 | $6302 | Yes | |
8362 | 32 | 2800 | 3600 | 3500 | 48 | 265 | 64 | $5488 | Yes | |
8360 | Y | 36 | 2400 | 3500 | 3100 | 54 | 250 | 64 | $4702 | Yes |
8358 | P | 32 | 2600 | 3400 | 3200 | 48 | 240 | 8 | $3950 | Yes |
8358 | 32 | 2600 | 3400 | 3300 | 48 | 250 | 64 | $3950 | Yes | |
8352 | Y | 32 | 2200 | 3400 | 2800 | 48 | 205 | 64 | $3450 | Yes |
8352 | V | 36 | 2100 | 3500 | 2500 | 54 | 195 | 8 | $3450 | Yes |
8352 | S | 32 | 2200 | 3400 | 2800 | 48 | 205 | 512 | $4046 | Yes |
8352 | M | 32 | 2300 | 3500 | 2800 | 48 | 185 | 64 | $3864 | Yes |
8351 | N | 36 | 2400 | 3500 | 3100 | 54 | 225 | 64 | $3027 | Yes |
Xeon Gold 6300 (8x DDR4-3200) | ||||||||||
6354 | 18 | 3000 | 3600 | 3600 | 39 | 205 | 64 | $2445 | Yes | |
6348 | 28 | 2600 | 3500 | 3400 | 42 | 235 | 64 | $3072 | Yes | |
6346 | 16 | 3100 | 3600 | 3600 | 36 | 205 | 64 | $2300 | Yes | |
6342 | 24 | 2800 | 3500 | 3300 | 36 | 230 | 64 | $2529 | Yes | |
6338 | T | 24 | 2100 | 3400 | 2700 | 36 | 165 | 64 | $2742 | Yes |
6338 | N | 32 | 2200 | 3500 | 2700 | 48 | 185 | 64 | $2795 | Yes |
6338 | 32 | 2000 | 3200 | 2600 | 48 | 205 | 64 | $2612 | Yes | |
6336 | Y | 24 | 2400 | 3600 | 3000 | 36 | 185 | 64 | $1977 | Yes |
6334 | 8 | 3600 | 3700 | 3600 | 18 | 165 | 64 | $2214 | Yes | |
6330 | N | 28 | 2200 | 3400 | 2600 | 42 | 165 | 64 | $2029 | Yes |
6330 | 28 | 2000 | 3100 | 2600 | 42 | 205 | 64 | $1894 | Yes | |
6326 | 16 | 2900 | 3500 | 3300 | 24 | 185 | 64 | $1300 | Yes | |
6314 | U | 32 | 2300 | 3400 | 2900 | 48 | 205 | 64 | $2600 | Yes |
6312 | U | 24 | 2400 | 3600 | 3100 | 36 | 185 | 64 | $1450 | Yes |
Xeon Gold 5300 (8x DDR4-2933) | ||||||||||
5320 | T | 20 | 2300 | 3500 | 2900 | 30 | 150 | 64 | $1727 | Yes |
5320 | 26 | 2200 | 3400 | 2800 | 39 | 185 | 64 | $1555 | Yes | |
5318 | Y | 24 | 2100 | 3400 | 2600 | 36 | 165 | 64 | $1273 | Yes |
5318 | S | 24 | 2100 | 3400 | 2600 | 36 | 165 | 512 | $1667 | Yes |
5318 | N | 24 | 2100 | 3400 | 2700 | 36 | 150 | 64 | $1375 | Yes |
5317 | 12 | 3000 | 3600 | 3400 | 18 | 150 | 64 | $950 | Yes | |
5315 | Y | 8 | 3200 | 3600 | 3500 | 12 | 140 | 64 | $895 | Yes |
Xeon Silver (8x DDR4-2666) | ||||||||||
4316 | 20 | 2300 | 3400 | 2800 | 30 | 150 | 8 | $1002 | ||
4314 | 16 | 2400 | 3400 | 2900 | 24 | 135 | 8 | $694 | Yes | |
4310 | T | 10 | 2300 | 3400 | 2900 | 15 | 105 | 8 | $555 | |
4310 | 12 | 2100 | 3300 | 2700 | 18 | 120 | 8 | $501 | ||
4309 | Y | 8 | 2800 | 3600 | 3400 | 12 | 105 | 8 | $501 | |
Q = Liquid Cooled SKU Y = Supports Intel SST-PP 2.0 P = IaaS Cloud Specialised Processor V = SaaS Cloud Specialised Processor N = Networking/NFV Optimized M = Media Processing Optimized T = Long-Life and Extended Thermal Support U = Uniprocessor (1P Only) S = 512 GB SGX Enclave per CPU Guaranteed (...but not all 512 GB are labelled S) |
The peak turbo on these processors is 3.7 GHz, which is much lower than what we saw with the previous generation. Despite this, Intel seems to be keeping prices reasonable, and enabling Optane support through most of the stack except for the Silver processors (which has its own single exception).
New suffixes include Q, for a liquid cooled processor model with higher all-core frequencies at 270 W, and Intel said this part came about based on customer demand. The T processors are extended life / extended thermal support, which usually means -40ºC to 125ºC support – useful when working at the poles or in other extreme conditions. M/N/P/V specialized processors, according to our chat with Lisa Spelman, GM of the Xeon and Memory Group, are the focal points for software stack optimizations. Users that want focused hardware that can get 2-10%+ more performance on their specific workload can get these processors for which the software will be specifically tuned. Lisa stated that while all processors will receive uplifts, the segmented parts are the ones those uplifts will be targeted for. This means managing turbo vs use case and adapting code for that, which can only really be optimized for a known turbo profile.
Competition
It’s hard not to notice that the server market over the last couple of years has become more competitive. Not only is Intel competing with its own high market share, but x86 alternatives from AMD have scored big wins when it comes to per-core performance, and Arm implementations such as the Ampere Altra can enable unprecedented density at competitive performance as well. Here’s how they all stand, looking at top-of-stack offerings.
Top-of-Stack Competition | ||||
AnandTech | EPYC 7003 |
Amazon Graviton2 |
Ampere Altra |
Intel Xeon |
Platform | Milan | Graviton2 | QuickSilver | Ice Lake |
Processor | 7763 | Graviton2 | Q80-33 | 8380 |
uArch | Zen 3 | N1 | N1 | Sunny Cove |
Cores | 64 | 64 | 80 | 40 |
TDP | 280 W | ? | 250 W | 270 W |
Base Freq | 2450 | 2500 | 3300 | 2300 |
Turbo Freq | 3500 | 2500 | 3300 | 3400 |
All-Core | ~3200 | 2500 | 3300 | 3000 |
L3 Cache | 256 MB | 32 MB | 32 MB | 60 MB |
PCIe | 4.0 x128 | ? | 4.0 x128 | 4.0 x64 |
Chipset | On CPU | ? | On CPU | External |
DDR4 | 8 x 3200 | 8 x 3200 | 8 x 3200 | 8 x 3200 |
DRAM Cap | 4 TB | ? | 4 TB | 4 TB |
Optane | No | No | No | Yes |
Price | $7890 | N/A | $4050 | $8099 |
At 40 cores, Intel does look a little behind, especially as Ampere is currently at 80 cores and a higher frequency, and will come out with a 128-core Altra Max version here very shortly. This means Ampere will be able to enable more cores in a single socket than Intel can in two sockets. Intel’s competitive advantage however will be the large current install base and decades of optimization, as well as new security features and its total offering to the market.
On a pure x86 level, AMD launched Milan only a few weeks ago, with its new Zen 3 core which has been highly impressive. Using a chiplet based approach, AMD has over 1000 mm2 of silicon to spread across 64 high performance cores and massive amounts of IO. Compared to Intel, which is around 660 mm2 and monolithic, AMD has the chipset onboard in its IO die, whereas Intel keeps it external which saves a good amount of idle power. Top of stack pricing between AMD and Intel is similar now, however AMD is also focusing in the mid-range with products like the 7F53 which really impressed us. We’ll see what Intel can respond with.
In our numbers today, we’ll be comparing Intel’s top-of-stack to everyone else. The battle royale of behemoths.
Gen on Gen Improvements: ISO Power
It is also important to look at what Intel is offering generationally in a like-for-like comparison. Intel’s 28-core 205 W point for the previous generation Cascade Lake is a good stake in the ground, and the Intel Xeon Gold 6258R is the dual socket equivalent of the Platinum 8280. We reviewed the two and they performed identically.
For this review, we’ve put the 40-core Xeon Platinum 8380 down to 205 W to see the effect of performance. But perhaps more in line, we also have the Xeon Gold 6330 which is a direct 28-core and 205 W replacement.
Intel Xeon Comparison: 3rd Gen vs 2nd Gen 2P, 205 W vs 205 W |
|||
Xeon Gold 6330 |
Xeon Plat 8352Y |
AnandTech | Xeon Gold 6258R |
28 / 56 | 32 / 64 | Cores / Threads | 28 / 56 |
2000 MHz Base 3100 MHz ST 2600 MHz MT |
2200 MHz Base 3400 MHz ST 2800 MHz MT |
Base Freq ST Freq MT Freq |
2700 MHz Base 4000 MHz ST 3300 MHz MT |
35 MB + 42 MB | 40 MB + 48 MB | L2 + L3 Cache | 28 MB + 38.5 MB |
205 W | 205 W | TDP | 205 W |
PCIe 4.0 x64 | PCIe 4.0 x64 | PCIe | PCIe 3.0 x48 |
8 x DDR4-3200 | 8 x DDR4-3200 | DRAM Support | 6 x DDR4-2933 |
4 TB | 4 TB | DRAM Capacity | 1 TB |
200-series | 200-series | Optane | 100-series |
4 TB Optane + 2 TB DRAM |
4 TB Optane + 2 TB DRAM |
Optane Capacity Per Socket |
1 TB DDR4-2666 + 1.5 TB |
64 GB | 64 GB | SGX Enclave | None |
1P, 2P | 1P, 2P | Socket Support | 1P, 2P |
3 x 11.2 GT/s | 3x 11.2 GT/s | UPI Links | 3 x 10.4 GT/s |
$1894 | $3450 | Price (1ku) | $3950 |
So the 6330 might seem like a natural fit, however, the 8352Y feels better given that it is more equivalent in price and offers more performance. Intel is promoting a +20% raw performance boost with the new generation, which is important here, because the 8352Y still loses 500 MHz to the previous generation in all-core frequency. The 8352Y and 6330 do make it up in the extra features, such as DDR4 channels, memory support, PCIe 4.0, Optane support, SGX enclave support, and faster UPI links.
This review has a few of our 6330 numbers that we’ve been able to run in the short time we’ve had the system.
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mode_13h - Thursday, April 8, 2021 - link
Please tell me you did this test with an ICC released only a couple years ago, or else I feel embarrassed for you polluting this discussion with such irrelevant facts.Oxford Guy - Sunday, April 11, 2021 - link
It wasn't that long ago.If you want to increase the signal to noise ratio you should post something substantive.
For instance, if you think think ICC no longer produces faster Blender builds why not post some evidence to that effect?
eastcoast_pete - Tuesday, April 6, 2021 - link
This Xeon generation exists primarily because Intel had to come through and deliver something in 10 nm, after announcing the heck out of it for years. As an actual processor, they are not bad as far as Xeons are concerned, but clearly inferior to AMD's current EPYC line, especially on price/performance. Plus, we and the world know that the real update is around the corner within a year: Sapphire Rapids. That one promises a lot of performance uplift, not the least by having PCI-5 and at least the option of directly linked HBM for RAM. Lastly, if Intel would have managed to make this line compatible with the older socket (it's not), one could at least have used these Ice Lake Xeons to update Cooper Lake systems via a CPU swap. As it stands, I don't quite see the value proposition, unless you're in an Intel shop and need capacity very badly right now.Limadanilo2022 - Tuesday, April 6, 2021 - link
Agreed. Both Ice Lake and Rocket lake are just placeholders to try to make something before the real improvement comes with Saphire rapids and Alder Make respectively... I'm one that says that AMD really needs the competition right now to not get sloppy and become "2017-2020 Intel". I want to see both competing hard in the next years aheaddrothgery - Wednesday, April 7, 2021 - link
Rocket Lake is a stopgap. Ice Lake (and Ice Lake SP) were just late; they would have been unquestioned market leaders if launched on time and even now mostly just run into problems when the competition is throwing way more cores at the problem.AdrianBc - Wednesday, April 7, 2021 - link
No, Ice Lake Server cores have a much lower clock frequency and a much smaller L3 cache than Epyc 7xx3, so they are much slower core per core than AMD Milan for any general purpose application, e.g. software compilation.The Ice Lake Server cores have a double number of floating-point multipliers that can be used by AVX-512 programs, so they are faster (despite their clock frequency deficit) for the applications that are limited by FP multiplication throughput or that can use other special AVX-512 features, e.g. the instructions useful for machine learning.
Oxford Guy - Wednesday, April 7, 2021 - link
'limited by FP multiplication throughput or that can use other special AVX-512 features, e.g. the instructions useful for machine learning.'How do they compare with Power?
How do they compare with GPUs? (I realize that a GPU is very good at a much more limited palette of work types versus a general-purpose CPU. However... how much overlap there is between a GPU and AVX-512 is something at least non-experts will wonder about.)
AdrianBc - Thursday, April 8, 2021 - link
The best GPUs from NVIDIA and AMD can provide between 3 and 4 times more performance per watt than the best Intel Xeons with AVX-512.However most GPUs are usable only in applications where low precision is appropriate, i.e. graphics and machine learning.
The few GPUs that can be used for applications that need higher precision (e.g. NVIDIA A100 or Radeon Instinct) are extremely expensive, much more than Xeons or Epycs, and individuals or small businesses have very little chances to be able to buy them.
mode_13h - Friday, April 9, 2021 - link
Please re-check the price list. The top-end A100 does sell for a bit more than the $8K list price of the top Xeon and EPYC, however MI100 seems to be pretty close. perf/$ is still wildly in favor of GPUs.Unfortunately, if you're only looking at the GPUs' ordinary compute specs, you're missing their real point of differentiation, which is their low-precision tensor performance. That's far beyond what the CPUs can dream of!
Trust there are good reasons why Intel scrapped Xeon Phi, after flogging it for 2 generations (plus a few prior unreleased iterations), and adopted a pure GPU approach to compute!
mode_13h - Thursday, April 8, 2021 - link
"woulda, coulda, shoulda"Ice Lake SP is not even competitive with Rome. So, they missed their market window by quite a lot!