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AMD Microsoft Windows

Windows 11 Might Tank Ryzen CPU Performance, AMD Warns (pcworld.com) 54

AMD said Windows 11 can cut game performance on Ryzen CPUs by 10 to 15 percent, and the operating system may not utilize AMD's "preferred core" technology, but a fix is in the works. PCWorld reports: A support note on AMD's web site published this week said Windows 11 may increase L3 cache latency a whopping threefold, which can cause slowdowns in latency sensitive applications. Lighter duty, cache-sensitive games might see a 3 percent to 5 percent hit, and lighter-duty games as e-sports titles could see frame rates drop from 10 to 15 percent. AMD also said its "preferred core" feature, which tells the operating system which core in each CPU can hit the highest clock, also doesn't work right in Windows 11. Each CPU is tested to see which core will run the fastest at the factory and is marked so the OS will dispatch tasks to that "preferred core." Since Windows 11 doesn't seem to work with it right now, any performance bump from using the best core wouldn't happen. The company said the performance cost would be most noticeable in CPUs with more than 8 cores and with TDP ratings above 65 watts.
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Windows 11 Might Tank Ryzen CPU Performance, AMD Warns

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  • Linux thanks you!

  • by williamyf ( 227051 ) on Wednesday October 06, 2021 @06:16PM (#61867547)

    And from now to then migrate to Windows 11 at your own leisure...

    Take it easy, take it slow, take it steady. No worries.

    • "take it slow, take it steady" - That is the whole problem. Windows is taking it slow.
    • "Can use your current windows 10 up until 2025"

      Maybe by then they'll have some of the bugs fixed.

    • And from now to then migrate to Windows 11 at your own leisure...

      Take it easy, take it slow, take it steady. No worries.

      You misspelled Linux. Other than that, yes, take it easy and slow.

    • by antdude ( 79039 )

      And alternate OS like Linux.

    • by MrL0G1C ( 867445 )

      Turning TPM off should delay the update for a whlle... Any other tips?

      I'm going to have to take the plunge and try Proton soon. I just hate trying dual boot, you never know when it's going to hose the partition setup.

      Many older games don't work with win10, I wonder if proton would work any better for them or if I should add a win7 partition to the mix.

  • by JustAnotherOldGuy ( 4145623 ) on Wednesday October 06, 2021 @07:38PM (#61867711) Journal

    Windows: "The Gift That Keeps On Taking."

  • In the legacy of Windows ME, and Windows 8, Windows 11 is crap!
  • Considering Ryzen came out a month ago and Microsoft has only been working on Windows 11 for the last week, seems reasonable they wouldnâ(TM)t be able to launch with such a novel feature implemented.

    Oh waitâ¦

  • The only solution to the long string of problems caused by MS is to let them die. They do not have it and, after all this time, it is clear they cannot get it.

    • What's your alternative? Linux - an OS that also doesn't support core preferencing?

      • Re: (Score:2, Informative)

        by BadDreamer ( 196188 )

        Linux has had CPPC for years. And AMD has provided the code needed for their additional functionality (CPPC2). That it doesn't make much difference on Linux is another matter.

        • Linux has had CPPC for years.

          AMD's implementation of Ryzen is specifically not compatible with the ACPI CPPC implementation. That's the core problem here (no pun intended). That's why you need scheduler specific optimisations. AMD only introduced it on Windows because it really only benefits games which thrash one core while offloading parallel processing to others.

          It's little surprise that Windows 11 killed it, several Windows 10 updates also introduced issues with it. Give it a month and it'll be back. Round and round we go.

          This is a

          • Except the new way of handling CPU states in Linux is letting the CPU do it. Meaning AMD CPU's are as fast as they can possibly be to change state. And what AMD uses is called CPPC2, and is also in Linux now.

            So you're spreading FUD.

            • Yeah except it doesn't work the same and Windows specifically is still faster in all benchmarks because while CPPC2 in Linux prioritises cores it doesn't prioritise execution units.

              Stop pretending they are the same, AMD put effort into Windows optimisations. They've put very little into Linux.

              • I pretend nothing. They ARE the same. CPPC2 is not fully optimized yet, sure, (and neither is Windows' version, at that) but that is because that has not been needed. Linux already manages work loads better in general.

                • Linux already manages work loads better in general.

                  And yet performs worse. Or in the current case, equal to Windows 11. Claiming they "are the same" just shows your ignorance of the Zen architecture. Now take your own advice and stop spreading FUD. Instead, why not direct your efforts to AMD to bring the optimisations in does in Windows to Linux.

            • If you want to stop spreading FUD then acknowledge the Windows 11 numbers are equal to Linux and simply aren't as optimised as Windows 10 was, or (as past performance dictates) Windows 11 likely will be in a couple of weeks.

          • "Give it a month" is almost true for Linux too, just the "a month" completely depends on test results / kernel maintainers. The patches are out, being tested.

            https://www.phoronix.com/scan.... [phoronix.com]
            https://www.tomshardware.com/n... [tomshardware.com]

  • This is apparently mostly a problem for games, and only for games that are maxing out your hardware. Few workloads keep your L3 cache maxed out.

    And it will be fixed soon.

    So while it is true you can switch to Linux and have your L3 cache still going full speed, it won't actually solve the problem of "my windoze game has a slightly lower refresh rate."

    • This is apparently mostly a problem for games

      Given the fact that Windows is pretty much useless except for games - the proof that it's a toy OS - , I'd say it's a big problem.

  • And this is why... (Score:4, Insightful)

    by Chas ( 5144 ) on Thursday October 07, 2021 @03:52AM (#61868477) Homepage Journal

    Anyone who gives a damn about system performance does NOT early-adopt new MS Operating Systems.

  • I'm no Microsoft fan. That said, having a shaky beginning to a new OS launch is pretty much par for the course in MS land. This is why production systems in most businesses don't jump on the latest OS the second it's released.

    Now, we can argue that it's a failure that MS either drops features or flat out bungles them when transitioning to an OS that, at its core, is pretty much the same code with new shiny wrappers, but again, why would anyone be surprised? Microsoft has used its userbase as alpha/beta t

  • I have been thinking about getting a new laptop with a Zen 3 processor -- do the most recent versions of the Linux kernel support the "preferred core" feature?

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