One of the stories around AMD’s initial generations of Zen processors was the effect of Simultaneous Multi-Threading (SMT) on performance. By running with this mode enabled, as is default in most situations, users saw significant performance rises in situations that could take advantage. The reasons for this performance increase rely on two competing factors: first, why is the core designed to be so underutilized by one thread, or second, the construction of an efficient SMT strategy in order to increase performance. In this review, we take a look at AMD’s latest Zen 3 architecture to observe the benefits of SMT.

What is Simultaneous Multi-Threading (SMT)?

We often consider each CPU core as being able to process one stream of serial instructions for whatever program is being run. Simultaneous Multi-Threading, or SMT, enables a processor to run two concurrent streams of instructions on the same processor core, sharing resources and optimizing potential downtime on one set of instructions by having a secondary set to come in and take advantage of the underutilization. Two of the limiting factors in most computing models are either compute or memory latency, and SMT is designed to interleave sets of instructions to optimize compute throughput while hiding memory latency. 


An old slide from Intel, which has its own marketing term for SMT: Hyper-Threading

When SMT is enabled, depending on the processor, it will allow two, four, or eight threads to run on that core (we have seen some esoteric compute-in-memory solutions with 24 threads per core). Instructions from any thread are rearranged to be processed in the same cycle and keep utilization of the core resources high. Because multiple threads are used, this is known as extracting thread-level parallelism (TLP) from a workload, whereas a single thread with instructions that can run concurrently is instruction-level parallelism (ILP).

Is SMT A Good Thing?

It depends on who you ask.

SMT2 (two threads per core) involves creating core structures sufficient to hold and manage two instruction streams, as well as managing how those core structures share resources. For example, if one particular buffer in your core design is meant to handle up to 64 instructions in a queue, if the average is lower than that (such as 40), then the buffer is underutilized, and an SMT design will enable the buffer is fed on average to the top. That buffer might be increased to 96 instructions in the design to account for this, ensuring that if both instruction streams are running at an ‘average’, then both will have sufficient headroom. This means two threads worth of use, for only 1.5 times the buffer size. If all else works out, then it is double the performance for less than double the core design in design area. But in ST mode, where most of that 96-wide buffer is less than 40% filled, because the whole buffer has to be powered on all the time, it might be wasting power.

But, if a core design benefits from SMT, then perhaps the core hasn’t been designed optimally for a single thread of performance in the first place. If enabling SMT gives a user exact double performance and perfect scaling across the board, as if there were two cores, then perhaps there is a direct issue with how the core is designed, from execution units to buffers to cache hierarchy. It has been known for users to complain that they only get a 5-10% gain in performance with SMT enabled, stating it doesn't work properly - this could just be because the core is designed better for ST. Similarly, stating that a +70% performance gain means that SMT is working well could be more of a signal to an unbalanced core design that wastes power.

This is the dichotomy of Simultaneous Multi-Threading. If it works well, then a user gets extra performance. But if it works too well, perhaps this is indicative of a core not suited to a particular workload. The answer to the question ‘Is SMT a good thing?’ is more complicated than it appears at first glance.

We can split up the systems that use SMT:

  • High-performance x86 from Intel
  • High-performance x86 from AMD
  • High-performance POWER/z from IBM
  • Some High-Performance Arm-based designs
  • High-Performance Compute-In-Memory Designs
  • High-Performance AI Hardware

Comparing to those that do not:

  • High-efficiency x86 from Intel
  • All smartphone-class Arm processors
  • Successful High-Performance Arm-based designs
  • Highly focused HPC workloads on x86 with compute bottlenecks

(Note that Intel calls its SMT implementation ‘HyperThreading’, which is a marketing term specifically for Intel).

At this point, we've only been discussing SMT where we have two threads per core, known as SMT2. Some of the more esoteric hardware designs go beyond two threads-per-core based SMT, and use up to eight. You will see this stylized in documentation as SMT8, compared to SMT2 or SMT4. This is how IBM approaches some of its designs. Some compute-in-memory applications go as far as SMT24!!

There is a clear trend between SMT-enabled systems and no-SMT systems, and that seems to be the marker of high-performance. The one exception to that is the recent Apple M1 processor and the Firestorm cores.

It should be noted that for systems that do support SMT, it can be disabled to force it down to one thread per core, to run in SMT1 mode. This has a few major benefits:

It enables each thread to have access to a full core worth of resources. In some workload situations, having two threads on the same core will mean sharing of resources, and cause additional unintended latency, which may be important for latency critical workloads where deterministic (the same) performance is required. It also reduces the number of threads competing for L3 capacity, should that be a limiting factor. Also should any software be required to probe every other workflow for data, for a 16-core processor like the 5950X that means only reaching out to 15 other threads rather than 31 other threads, reducing potential crosstalk limited by core-to-core connectivity.

The other aspect is power. With a single thread on a core and no other thread to jump in if resources are underutilized, when there is a delay caused by pulling something from main memory, then the power of the core would be lower, providing budget for other cores to ramp up in frequency. This is a bit of a double-edged sword if the core is still at a high voltage while waiting for data in an SMT disabled mode. SMT in this way can help improve performance per Watt, assuming that enabling SMT doesn’t cause competition for resources and arguably longer stalls waiting for data.

Mission critical enterprise workloads that require deterministic performance, and some HPC codes that require large amounts of memory per thread often disable SMT on their deployed systems. Consumer workloads are often not as critical (at least in terms of scale and $$$), and so the topic isn’t often covered in detail.

Most modern processors, when in SMT-enabled mode, if they are running a single instruction stream, will operate as if in SMT-off mode and have full access to resources. Some software takes advantage of this, spawning only one thread for each physical core on the system. Because core structures can be dynamically partitioned (adjusts resources for each thread while threads are in progress) or statically shared (adjusts before a workload starts), situations where the two threads on a core are creating their own bottleneck would benefit having only a single thread per core active. Knowing how a workload uses a core can help when designing software designed to make use of multiple cores.

Here is an example of a Zen3 core, showing all the structures. One of the progress points with every new generation of hardware is to reduce the number of statically allocated structures within a core, as dynamic structures often give the best flexibility and peak performance. In the case of Zen3, only three structures are still statically partitioned: the store queue, the retire queue, and the micro-op queue. This is the same as Zen2.

 

SMT on AMD Zen3 and Ryzen 5000

So much like AMD’s previous Zen-based processors, the Ryzen 5000 series that uses Zen3 cores also have an SMT2 design. By default this is enabled in every consumer BIOS, however users can choose to disable it through the firmware options.

For this article, we have run our AMD Ryzen 5950X processor, a 16-core high-performance Zen3 processor, in both SMT Off and SMT On modes through our test suite and through some industry standard benchmarks. The goals of these tests are to ascertain the answers to the following questions:

  1. Is there a single-thread benefit to disabling SMT?
  2. How much performance increase does enabling SMT provide?
  3. Is there a change in performance per watt in enabling SMT?
  4. Does having SMT enabled result in a higher workload latency?*

*more important for enterprise/database/AI workloads

The best argument for enabling SMT would be a No-Lots-Yes-No result. Conversely the best argument against SMT would be a Yes-None-No-Yes. But because the core structures were built with having SMT enabled in mind, the answers are rarely that clear.

Test System

For our test suite, due to obtaining new 32 GB DDR4-3200 memory modules for Ryzen testing, we re-ran our standard test suite on the Ryzen 9 5950X with SMT On and SMT Off. As per our usual testing methodology, we test memory at official rated JEDEC specifications for each processor at hand.

Test Setup
AMD AM4 Ryzen 9 5950X MSI X570
Godlike
1.B3T13
AGESA 1100
Noctua
NH-U12S
ADATA
4x32 GB
DDR4-3200
GPU Sapphire RX 460 2GB (CPU Tests)
NVIDIA RTX 2080 Ti
PSU OCZ 1250W Gold
SSD Crucial MX500 2TB
OS Windows 10 x64 1909
Spectre and Meltdown Patched
VRM Supplimented with Silversone SST-FHP141-VF 173 CFM fans

Also many thanks to the companies that have donated hardware for our test systems, including the following:

Hardware Providers for CPU and Motherboard Reviews
Sapphire
RX 460 Nitro
NVIDIA
RTX 2080 Ti
Crucial SSDs Corsair PSUs
G.Skill DDR4 ADATA
DDR4-3200 32GB
Silverstone
Ancillaries
Noctua
Coolers

CPU Performance
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  • Machinus - Thursday, December 3, 2020 - link

    Can you sell me yours so I can try one?
  • Marwin - Thursday, December 3, 2020 - link

    For me the main question is not whether SMT is bad or good in multithread, but how it is good or bad for 2-4-6 thread loads on for example 12 core Ryzen. When windows may or may not schedule threads to real cores (by 1 thread of 1 core) or to SMT cores in series
  • Duraz0rz - Thursday, December 3, 2020 - link

    IIRC, Windows knows what cores are real vs virtual and what virtual core maps to a real core. It shouldn't matter if a thread is scheduled on a real or virtual cores, though. If a thread is scheduled on a virtual core that maps to a real core that's not utilized, it still has access to the resources of the full core.

    SMT doesn't come into play until you need more threads than cores.
  • GreenReaper - Thursday, December 3, 2020 - link

    That's not *quite* true. Some elements are staticly partitioned, notably some instruction/data queues. See 20.19 Simultaneous multithreading in https://www.agner.org/optimize/microarchitecture.p...
    "The queueing of µops is equally distributed between the two threads so that each thread gets half or the maximum throughput."

    This partitioning is set on boot. So, where each thread might get 128 queued micro-ops with SMT off, you only get 64 with it on. This might have little or no impact, but it depends on the code.

    The article itself says: "In the case of Zen3, only three structures are still statically partitioned: the store queue, the retire queue, and the micro-op queue. This is the same as Zen2."
  • jeisom - Thursday, December 3, 2020 - link

    Honestly it looks like you provided a 3rd viewpoint. As these are general purpose processors it really depends on the workload/code optimization and how they are optimized for a given targeted workload.
  • jospoortvliet - Thursday, December 3, 2020 - link

    Hmmm, if you have a *very* specific workload, yes, 'it depends', but we're really talking HPC here. Pretty much nothing you do at home makes it worth rebooting-and-disabling-SMT for on an AMD Zen 3.
  • Holliday75 - Thursday, December 3, 2020 - link

    The confusion comes in because these are consumer processors. These are not technically HPC. Lines are being blurred as these things make $10k CPU's from 5-10 years ago look like trash in a lot of work loads.
  • GeoffreyA - Thursday, December 3, 2020 - link

    Interesting article. Thank you. Would be nice to see the Intel side of the picture.
  • idealego - Thursday, December 3, 2020 - link

    I imagine compiler optimization these days is tuned for SMT. Perhaps this could have been discussed in the article? I wonder how much of a difference this makes to SMT on/off.
  • bwj - Thursday, December 3, 2020 - link

    This article ignores the important viewpoint from the server side. If I have several independent, orthogonal workloads scheduled on a computer I can greatly benefit from SMT. For example if one workload is a pointer-chasing database search type of thing, and one workload is compressing videos, they are not going to contend for backend CPU resources at all, and the benefit from SMT will approach +100%, i.e. it will work perfectly and transparently. That's the way you exploit SMT in the datacenter, by scheduling orthogonal non-interfering workloads on sibling threads.

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