After Swift Comes Cyclone Oscar

I was fortunate enough to receive a tip last time that pointed me at some LLVM documentation calling out Apple’s Swift core by name. Scrubbing through those same docs, it seems like my leak has been plugged. Fortunately I came across a unique string looking at the iPhone 5s while it booted:

I can’t find any other references to Oscar online, in LLVM documentation or anywhere else of value. I also didn’t see Oscar references on prior iPhones, only on the 5s. I’d heard that this new core wasn’t called Swift, referencing just how different it was. Obviously Apple isn’t going to tell me what it’s called, so I’m going with Oscar unless someone tells me otherwise.

Oscar is a CPU core inside M7, Cyclone is the name of the Swift replacement.

Cyclone likely resembles a beefier Swift core (or at least Swift inspired) than a new design from the ground up. That means we’re likely talking about a 3-wide front end, and somewhere in the 5 - 7 range of execution ports. The design is likely also capable of out-of-order execution, given the performance levels we’ve been seeing.

Cyclone is a 64-bit ARMv8 core and not some Apple designed ISA. Cyclone manages to not only beat all other smartphone makers to ARMv8 but also key ARM server partners. I’ll talk about the whole 64-bit aspect of this next, but needless to say, this is a big deal.

The move to ARMv8 comes with some of its own performance enhancements. More registers, a cleaner ISA, improved SIMD extensions/performance as well as cryptographic acceleration are all on the menu for the new core.

Pipeline depth likely remains similar (maybe slightly longer) as frequencies haven’t gone up at all (1.3GHz). The A7 doesn’t feature support for any thermal driven CPU (or GPU) frequency boost.

The most visible change to Apple’s first ARMv8 core is a doubling of the L1 cache size: from 32KB/32KB (instruction/data) to 64KB/64KB. Along with this larger L1 cache comes an increase in access latency (from 2 clocks to 3 clocks from what I can tell), but the increase in hit rate likely makes up for the added latency. Such large L1 caches are quite common with AMD architectures, but unheard of in ultra mobile cores. A larger L1 cache will do a good job keeping the machine fed, implying a larger/more capable core.

The L2 cache remains unchanged in size at 1MB shared between both CPU cores. L2 access latency is improved tremendously with the new architecture. In some cases I measured L2 latency 1/2 that of what I saw with Swift.

The A7’s memory controller sees big improvements as well. I measured 20% lower main memory latency on the A7 compared to the A6. Branch prediction and memory prefetchers are both significantly better on the A7.

I noticed large increases in peak memory bandwidth on top of all of this. I used a combination of custom tools as well as publicly available benchmarks to confirm all of this. A quick look at Geekbench 3 (prior to the ARMv8 patch) gives a conservative estimate of memory bandwidth improvements:

Geekbench 3.0.0 Memory Bandwidth Comparison (1 thread)
  Stream Copy Stream Scale Stream Add Stream Triad
Apple A7 1.3GHz 5.24 GB/s 5.21 GB/s 5.74 GB/s 5.71 GB/s
Apple A6 1.3GHz 4.93 GB/s 3.77 GB/s 3.63 GB/s 3.62 GB/s
A7 Advantage 6% 38% 58% 57%

We see anywhere from a 6% improvement in memory bandwidth to nearly 60% running the same Stream code. I’m not entirely sure how Geekbench implemented Stream and whether or not we’re actually testing other execution paths in addition to (or instead of) memory bandwidth. One custom piece of code I used to measure memory bandwidth showed nearly a 2x increase in peak bandwidth. That may be overstating things a bit, but needless to say this new architecture has a vastly improved cache and memory interface.

Looking at low level Geekbench 3 results (again, prior to the ARMv8 patch), we get a good feel for just how much the CPU cores have improved.

Geekbench 3.0.0 Compute Performance
  Integer (ST) Integer (MT) FP (ST) FP (MT)
Apple A7 1.3GHz 1065 2095 983 1955
Apple A6 1.3GHz 750 1472 588 1165
A7 Advantage 42% 42% 67% 67%

Integer performance is up 44% on average, while floating point performance is up by 67%. Again this is without 64-bit or any other enhancements that go along with ARMv8. Memory bandwidth improves by 35% across all Geekbench tests. I confirmed with Apple that the A7 has a 64-bit wide memory interface, and we're likely talking about LPDDR3 memory this time around so there's probably some frequency uplift there as well.

The result is something Apple refers to as desktop-class CPU performance. I’ll get to evaluating those claims in a moment, but first, let’s talk about the other big part of the A7 story: the move to a 64-bit ISA.

A7 SoC Explained The Move to 64-bit
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  • rchangek - Wednesday, September 18, 2013 - link

    They are releasing A1528 in China for China Unicom and I find it weird that it is not listed anywhere in the LTE support documentation.
  • jasonelmore - Wednesday, September 18, 2013 - link

    Great review, 1st on the web to my knowledge. However there are a few points i want to note.

    1: Brian is your mobile guy, He knows a lot more than anand on this front. When i saw anand did this review, i cant help but think some fanboyism is taking place here, which could hinder credibility.

    2: You say the iphone 5S GPU is more powerful than the GPU in the iPad 4 but looking at the charts, its on par/same as the ipad 4. A achivement none-the-less, but the results are well within the margin of error (1fps)
  • doobydoo - Wednesday, September 18, 2013 - link

    I don't think there are any question marks over Anands credibility and it's a little silly to make out that there are.
  • jasonelmore - Wednesday, September 18, 2013 - link

    i'm just sayin, it makes me wonder if he's being 100% objective. and if i wonder it, then others will to. Bryan is a mobile author who reviews every mobile device to come through the labs, but when apple phones come out, suddenly anand takes the reigns from him. It's not like there are a ton of different phones out right now and they needed to spread the workload, anand could've at least let bryan do the 5C review, but nah, he wanted both.
  • Mondozai - Wednesday, September 18, 2013 - link

    I remember Anand saying that Brian would get the iPhone 5s review, but apparently that changed.

    In my opinion, this is for the better. Anand knows more about CPU's and GPU's than Brian and the most significant change with the iPhone 5s was the A7 chip, together with the camera.

    And, as you'll recall, Brian did a piece already on the 5s camera and cameras are sort of his speciality on smartphones, together with wireless.

    Secondly, and I'm just speculating here, Brian is known as more of an Android guy. Could it be that he is already working on another review, like the Z1 or the Note 3? He can't do them all.
  • dugbug - Wednesday, September 18, 2013 - link

    That changed IMHO with the 64-bit CPU. Not sure why anand doing the review matters to you, but the guy is amazing with CPU and GPU analysis. Let Bryan do follow-up analysis.
  • repoman27 - Wednesday, September 18, 2013 - link

    The embargo was lifted only one week after the reviewers got their hands on the devices, that's why Anand did these phones and not Brian. Regardless, Brian would have likely needed Anand to contribute on the A7 analysis, which was a crucial component of this review, and we would all still be waiting for a thesis from Brian.
  • susan_wong - Wednesday, September 18, 2013 - link

    For the AT Smartphone Bench battery life test:

    It would be great to know how many total web pages were loaded for each of the 4S, 5 and 5S before the battery died.
  • Krysto - Wednesday, September 18, 2013 - link

    Seems like Apple got to 64-bit first only because they didn't redesign the CPU core, too, like everyone else is doing. They rebuilt Swift on top of ARMv8 and just tweaked it.
  • ltcommanderdata - Wednesday, September 18, 2013 - link

    http://www.anandtech.com/show/6420/arms-cortex-a57...

    "Architecturally, the Cortex A57 is much like a tweaked Cortex A15 with 64-bit support."
    "Similarly, the Cortex A53 is a tweaked version of the Cortex A7 with 64-bit support."

    The 64-bit Cortex A57 and Cortex A53 are directly based on the existing 32-bit A15 and A7 respectively. That Apple's Cyclone is based on Swift really isn't a reason to dismiss it especially given how effective the results are.

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