Benchmarking Suite 2017

2017 CPU

For our Ryzen review, we are implementing our new CPU testing benchmark suite, fully scripted as of 2/17. This means that with a fresh OS install, we can configure the OS to be more consistent, install the new benchmarks, maintain version consistency without random updates and start running the tests in under 5 minutes. After that it's a one button press to start an 8-10hr test (with a high-performance core) with nearly 100 relevant data points in the benchmarks given below. The tests cover a wide range of segments, some of which will be familiar but some of the tests are new to benchmarking in general, but still highly relevant for the markets they come from.

Our new CPU tests go through six main areas. We cover the Web (we've got an un-updateable version of Chrome 56), general system tests (opening tricky PDFs, emulation, brain simulation, AI, 2D image to 3D model conversion), rendering (ray tracing, modeling), encoding (compression, AES, h264 and HEVC), office based tests (PCMark and others), and our legacy tests, throwbacks from another generation of bad code but interesting to compare.

A side note on OS preparation. As we're using Windows 10, there's a large opportunity for something to come in and disrupt our testing. So our default strategy is multiple: disable the ability to update as much as possible, disable Windows Defender, uninstall OneDrive, disable Cortana as much as possible, implement the high performance mode in the power options, and disable the internal platform clock which can drift away from being accurate if the base frequency drifts (and thus the timing ends up inaccurate).

Web Tests on Chrome 56

Sunspider
Kraken
Octane
Web13
Web15

System Tests

PDF Opening
FCAT
3DPM v21
Dolphin v5.0
DigiCortex v1.20
Agisoft PS v1.0 

Rendering Tests

Corona
Blender 2.78.1
LuxMark CPU C++
LuxMark CPU OpenCL
POV-Ray
CB15 ST
CB15 MT

Encoding Tests

7-Zip
WinRAR
TrueCrypt
HandBrake 264-LQ
HandBrake 264-HQ
HandBrake 265-4K (reworked from Ryzen 7 review)

Office / Professional

PCMark8 
Chromium Compile (new for Ryzen 5)
SYSmark 2014 / SE

Legacy Tests

3DPM v1 ST / MT
x264 HD 3 Pass 1, Pass 2
CB 11.5 ST / MT
CB 10 ST / MT

A side note - a couple of benchmarks (LuxMark) weren't fully 100% giving good data during testing. Need to go back and re-work this part of our testing.

2017 GPU

For our new set of GPU tests, we wanted to think big. There are a lot of users in the ecosystem that prioritize gaming above all else, especially when it comes to choosing the correct CPU. If there's a chance to save $50 and get a better graphics card for no loss in performance, then this is the route that gamers would prefer to tread. The angle here though is tough - lots of games have different requirements and cause different stresses on a system, with various graphics cards having different reactions to the code flow of a game. Then users also have different resolutions and different perceptions of what feels 'normal'. This all amounts to more degrees of freedom than we could hope to test in a lifetime, only for the data to become irrelevant in a few months when a new game or new GPU comes into the mix. Just for good measure, let us add in DirectX 12 titles that make it easier to use more CPU cores in a game to enhance fidelity.

Our original list of nine games planned in February quickly became six, due to the lack of professional-grade controls on Ubisoft titles. If you want to see For Honor, Steep or Ghost Recon: Wildlands benchmarked on AnandTech, point Ubisoft Annecy or Ubisoft Montreal in my direction. While these games have in-game benchmarks worth using, unfortunately they do not provide enough frame-by-frame detail to the end user, despite using it internally to produce the data the user eventually sees (and it typically ends up obfuscated by another layer as well). I would instead perhaps choose to automate these benchmarks via inputs, however the extremely variable loading time is a strong barrier to this.

So we have the following benchmarks as part of our 4/2 script, automated to the point of a one-button run and out pops the results four hours later, per GPU. Also listed are the resolutions and settings used.

Civilization 6 (1080p Ultra, 4K Ultra)
Ashes of the Singularity: Escalation* (1080p Extreme, 4K Extreme)
Shadow of Mordor (1080p Ultra, 4K Ultra)
Rise of the Tomb Raider #1 - GeoValley (1080p High, 4K Medium)
Rise of the Tomb Raider #2 - Prophets (1080p High, 4K Medium)
Rise of the Tomb Raider #3 - Mountain (1080p High, 4K Medium)
Rocket League (1080p Ultra, 4K Ultra)
Grand Theft Auto V (1080p Very High, 4K High)

For each of the GPUs in our testing, these games (at each resolution/setting combination) are run four times each, with outliers discarded. Average frame rates, 99th percentiles and 'Time Under x FPS' data is sorted, and the raw data is archived.

The four GPUs we've managed to obtain for these tests are:

MSI GTX 1080 Gaming X 8G
ASUS GTX 1060 Strix 6G
Sapphire Nitro R9 Fury 4GB
Sapphire Nitro RX 480 8GB

In our testing script, we save a couple of special things for the GTX 1080 here. The following tests are also added:

Civilization 6 (8K Ultra, 16K Lowest)
Ashes of the Singularity: Escalation* (8K Extreme, 16K Extreme)

These two benchmarks, with a little coercion, are able to be run beyond the specifications of the monitor being used, allowing for 'future' testing of GPUs at 8K and 16K with some amusing results. We are only running these tests on the GTX 1080, because there's no point watching a slideshow more than once.

*A note on Ashes. During our testing, the 2.2 update came through automatically, and broke our scripting methods due to a new splashscreen/popup. We worked to find a solution that worked one minute, and then stopped working 30 minutes later, and it was decided due to time limits that we'd look into the matter after the review.

Test Bed Setup and Hardware Benchmarking Performance: CPU System Tests
Comments Locked

254 Comments

View All Comments

  • hojnikb - Tuesday, April 11, 2017 - link

    Any word on R5 1400 review ? Would be interesting to see how 1/2 of L3 cache hits performance.
  • Ian Cutress - Tuesday, April 11, 2017 - link

    We've been promised a sample to arrive soon. I'm off some of next week, so after then :)
  • Omega215D - Tuesday, April 11, 2017 - link

    Just steal it from LinusTechTips... You know he has that stuff just lyin' around after fumbling with it =)
  • msroadkill612 - Thursday, April 13, 2017 - link

    No, but we have evidence of the effect of double l3 on ryzen cores - if that helps.

    current 4 core ryzens have double the l3 per core as 8 core ryzens do.
  • Infy2 - Tuesday, April 11, 2017 - link

    Shame 7700K is not among the results so we can't compare Ryzen 4C/8T to the best of Intel's 4C/8T.
  • ddriver - Tuesday, April 11, 2017 - link

    Slightly better in games, marginally behind in intensive computations.
  • Ian Cutress - Tuesday, April 11, 2017 - link

    For CPU tests, it's in our Benchmark database: www.anandtech.com/bench

    I still need to run our gaming tests on a whole raft of CPUs, something to do the rest of this month!
  • 0ldman79 - Tuesday, April 11, 2017 - link

    Any chance the formatting could be corrected to the FX line can be directly compared to the Ryzen line?

    Some of the benchmarks overlap but the formatting is different. A direct comparison isn't possible now in a single window. We have to open two windows to compare.
  • Ian Cutress - Friday, April 14, 2017 - link

    All the old data was on Windows 7, the new data is Windows 10. I've made it so in the same window the scores are comparable on the same OS.
  • milli - Tuesday, April 11, 2017 - link

    Something really weird is going on with the Rise of the Tomb Raider and Ryzen. There's a huge drop in performance in DX12 for Ryzen+nVidia.
    I mean, how on earth can the A10-7890K be faster than the 1500X? That game or nVidia's drivers need updating.

Log in

Don't have an account? Sign up now