A7 SoC Explained

I’m still surprised by the amount of confusion around Apple’s CPU cores, so that’s where I’ll start. I’ve already outlined how ARM’s business model works, but in short there are two basic types of licenses ARM will bestow upon its partners: processor and architecture. The former involves implementing an ARM designed CPU core, while the latter is the creation of an ARM ISA (Instruction Set Architecture) compatible CPU core.

NVIDIA and Samsung, up to this point, have gone the processor license route. They take ARM designed cores (e.g. Cortex A9, Cortex A15, Cortex A7) and integrate them into custom SoCs. In NVIDIA’s case the CPU cores are paired with NVIDIA’s own GPU, while Samsung licenses GPU designs from ARM and Imagination Technologies. Apple previously leveraged its ARM processor license as well. Until last year’s A6 SoC, all Apple SoCs leveraged CPU cores designed by and licensed from ARM.

With the A6 SoC however, Apple joined the ranks of Qualcomm with leveraging an ARM architecture license. At the heart of the A6 were a pair of Apple designed CPU cores that implemented the ARMv7-A ISA. I came to know these cores by their leaked codename: Swift.

At its introduction, Swift proved to be one of the best designs on the market. An excellent combination of performance and power consumption, the Swift based A6 SoC improved power efficiency over the previous Cortex A9 based design. Swift also proved to be competitive with the best from Qualcomm at the time. Since then however, Qualcomm has released two evolutions of its CPU core (Krait 300 and Krait 400), and pretty much regained performance leadership over Apple. Being on a yearly release cadence, this is Apple’s only attempt to take back the crown for the next 12 months.

Following tradition, Apple replaces its A6 SoC with a new generation: A7.

With only a week to test battery life, performance, wireless and cameras on two phones, in addition to actually using them as intended, there wasn’t a ton of time to go ridiculously deep into the new SoC’s architecture. Here’s what I’ve been able to piece together thus far.

First off, based on conversations with as many people in the know as possible, as well as just making an educated guess, it’s probably pretty safe to say that the A7 SoC is built on Samsung’s 28nm HK+MG process. It’s too early for 20nm at reasonable yields, and Apple isn’t ready to move some (not all) of its operations to TSMC.

The jump from 32nm to 28nm results in peak theoretical scaling of 76.5% (the same design on 28nm can be no smaller than 76.5% of the die area at 32nm). In reality, nothing ever scales perfectly so we’re probably talking about 80 - 85% tops. Either way that’s a good amount of room for new features.

At its launch event Apple officially announced both die size for the A7 (102mm^2) as well as transistor count (over 1 billion). Don’t underestimate the magnitude of both of these disclosures. The technical folks at Cupertino are clearly winning some battle to talk more about their designs and not less. We’re not yet at the point where I’m getting pretty diagrams and a deep dive, but it’s clear that Apple is beginning to open up more (and it’s awesome).

Apple has never previously disclosed transistor count. I also don’t know if this “over 1 billion” figure is based on a schematic or layout transistor count. The only additional detail I have is that Apple is claiming a near doubling of transistors compared to the A6. Looking at die sizes and taking into account scaling from the process node shift, there’s clearly a more fundamental change to the chip’s design. It is possible to optimize a design (and transistors) for area, which seems to be what has happened here.

The CPU cores are, once again, a custom design by Apple. These aren’t Cortex A57 derivatives (still too early for that), but rather some evolution of Apple’s own Swift architecture. I’ll dive into specifics of what I’ve been able to find in a moment. To answer the first question on everyone’s mind, I believe there are two of these cores on the A7. Before I explain how I arrived at this conclusion, let’s first talk about cores and clock speeds.

I always thought the transition from 2 to 4 cores happened quicker in mobile than I had expected. Thankfully there are some well threaded apps that have been able to take advantage of more than two cores and power gating keeps the negative impact of the additional cores down to a minimum. As we saw in our Moto X review however, two faster cores are still better for most uses than four cores running at lower frequencies. NVIDIA forced everyone’s hand in moving to 4 cores earlier than they would’ve liked, and now you pretty much can’t get away with shipping anything less than that in an Android handset. Even Motorola felt necessary to obfuscate core count with its X8 mobile computing system. Markets like China seem to also demand more cores over better ones, which is why we see such a proliferation of quad-core Cortex A5/A7 designs. Apple has traditionally been sensible in this regard, even dating back to core count decisions in its Macs. I remembering reviewing an old iMac and pitting it against a Dell XPS One at the time. This was in the pre-power gating/turbo days. Dell went the route of more cores, while Apple chose for fewer, faster ones. It also put the CPU savings into a better GPU. You can guess which system ended out ahead.

In such a thermally constrained environment, going quad-core only makes sense if you can properly power gate/turbo up when some cores are idle. I have yet to see any mobile SoC vendor (with the exception of Intel with Bay Trail) do this properly, so until we hit that point the optimal target is likely two cores. You only need to look back at the evolution of the PC to come to the same conclusion. Before the arrival of Nehalem and Lynnfield, you always had to make a tradeoff between fewer faster cores and more of them. Gaming systems (and most users) tended to opt for the former, while those doing heavy multitasking went with the latter. Once we got architectures with good turbo, the 2 vs 4 discussion became one of cost and nothing more. I expect we’ll follow the same path in mobile.

Then there’s the frequency discussion. Brian and I have long been hinting at the sort of ridiculous frequency/voltage combinations mobile SoC vendors have been shipping at for nothing more than marketing purposes. I remember ARM telling me the ideal target for a Cortex A15 core in a smartphone was 1.2GHz. Samsung’s Exynos 5410 stuck four Cortex A15s in a phone with a max clock of 1.6GHz. The 5420 increases that to 1.7GHz. The problem with frequency scaling alone is that it typically comes at the price of higher voltage. There’s a quadratic relationship between voltage and power consumption, so it’s quite possibly one of the worst ways to get more performance. Brian even tweeted an image showing the frequency/voltage curve for a high-end mobile SoC. Note the huge increase in voltage required to deliver what amounts to another 100MHz in frequency.

The combination of both of these things gives us a basis for why Apple settled on two Swift cores running at 1.3GHz in the A6, and it’s also why the A7 comes with two cores running at the same max frequency. Interestingly enough, this is the same max non-turbo frequency Intel settled at for Bay Trail. Given a faster process (and turbo), I would expect to see Apple push higher frequencies but without those things, remaining conservative makes sense. I verified frequency through a combination of reporting tools and benchmarks. While it’s possible that I’m wrong, everything I’ve run on the device (both public and not) points to a 1.3GHz max frequency.

Verifying core count is a bit easier. Many benchmarks report core count, I also have some internal tools that do the same - all agreed on the same 2 cores/2 threads conclusion. Geekbench 3 breaks out both single and multithreaded performance results. I checked with the developer to ensure that the number of threads isn’t hard coded. The benchmark queries the max number of logical CPUs before spawning that number of threads. Looking at the ratio of single to multithreaded performance on the iPhone 5s, it’s safe to say that we’re dealing with a dual-core part:

Geekbench 3 Single vs. Multithreaded Performance - Apple A7
  Integer FP
Single Threaded 1471 1339
Multi Threaded 2872 2659
A7 Advantage 1.97x 1.99x
Peak Theoretical 2C Advantage 2.00x 2.00x

Now the question is, what’s changed in these cores?

 

Introduction, Hardware & Cases After Swift Comes Cyclone
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  • Wilco1 - Wednesday, September 18, 2013 - link

    I completely agree it was totally unprofessional to sneak in an Intel development board into a phone review. Will we see A57 scores in future Intel phone reviews as well? I very much doubt it.

    Indeed I'd expect that when Bay Trail appears in phones, it will run at a lower max frequency, probably similar to Z3740. That will make it lose most of the JavaScript "benchmarks". However even the fastest BayTrail cannot compete with the Apple A7 in real CPU benchmarks like Geekbench 3, whether you compare 32-bit mode or 64-bit mode. And in terms of IPC, BT is beaten by A15 and A57 with a good margin, and now Apple A7 beats them all.
  • ddriver - Wednesday, September 18, 2013 - link

    What is wrong with this review it tries to imply other arm v8 chips won't get the same performance improvements as apple's twist on v8, which is PLAIN OUT WRONG. Truth is all v8 cores will get the upgrades - twice as many GP registers, twice as wide, same for the SIMD units, even SHA and AES in hardware. Surely, bias toward apple is nothing new at AT, and it is understandable that there is an intention to convince people to get an apple product now rather than wait a bit and get an android phone with a v8 chip, with larger screen, more memory and better features, but I don't think it is fair or even decent to make such claims devoid of facts to support them. Especially considering that the tech facts say otherwise.
  • ddriver - Wednesday, September 18, 2013 - link

    Same thing goes for including SHA and AES results in the chart that is supposed to display 64bit code performance improvements, considering that this boost in performance is not due to the width of the architecture but due to hardware implementations, which would be just as fast in 32bit mode... if they were available. I guess that chart really needed those to make it look better rather than the mixed bag that it really is.
  • raghu78 - Wednesday, September 18, 2013 - link

    anandtech does not day that other ARMv8 cores cannot get similar or better performance. you are making baseless accusations. Every ARMv8 ISA core implementation is not the same. its like saying AMD bulldozer and Intel sandybridge are the same. they support the same instruction sets but are very different in the micro architecture and implementation.

    None of the ARM SOC vendors have an ARM v8 core shipping today. The earliest you can see Qualcomm come out with an ARM v8 core would be H2 2014 on 20nm. Samsung uses ARM designed cores. so they too would come out with Cortex A57 on 20nm a year from now. The only company shipping a ARMv8 core today is Apple. They are atleast 9 - 12 months ahead of the competition. Credit should be given to Apple for aggressively improving their core and getting it to market well ahead of the competition. Heck Apple beat Intel by 6 months. Merrifield for smartphones won't be shipping till MWC 2014 in feb 2014.
  • ddriver - Wednesday, September 18, 2013 - link

    Yes, because Samsung doesn't have a fanatical devotee user base to enable the kind of profit margins apple aims for. That is why other manufacturers will wait until it actually makes sense to go for a v8 design. It is not like users need that much performance in a mobile phone, it is apple who needs that for the PR it needs to fix its declining sales.
  • lukarak - Wednesday, September 18, 2013 - link

    If users don't need more performance, why is then everybody and their brother shipping quad cores, octa cores, tons of ram, and touting that as the advantage over Apple who is only dual core :D

    Performance serves a much bigger purpose than just faster processing of user's data. It enables new features.

    You sir are just a little frustrated troll.
  • ddriver - Wednesday, September 18, 2013 - link

    Especially on mobile phones, the predominant reason for people to want performance is because foolish people are easily impressed by numbers. Not a single person who really needs and cares about performance would even consider a phone, much less run a performance critical application on a phone, of which there are none.

    Name-calling might work in your tiny head, but outside in the real world this is just you resorting to rudeness after failing to substantiate your claims with solid facts.

    But be my guest, do tell me what extra features has the extra performance enabled in 5s? What is it that you can do with the 5s that you can't do with the 5?

    Also, purpose is not "bigger" but "greater".
  • steven75 - Friday, September 20, 2013 - link

    "the predominant reason for people to want performance is because foolish people are easily impressed by numbers."

    Don't insult yourself.
  • lukarak - Sunday, September 22, 2013 - link

    Well, you can just compare yourself. For example the features on the 4, which is the last one to get iOS 7, and the 5S. They may both be on iOS 7, but there are important differences, or better yet, omissions.
    You know, there's a reason a phone can, for example, record a higher resolution video, of higher fps video, than just the megapixels on the sensor.

    The simple fact is that Apple provided the consumers with something extra. Do they need it? That's only for their wallets to decide, not Apple, not me, and certainly not you. If they don't need it now, they sure will in 2 years. Which will make their phone last longer, or make it hold a greater resale value. Each of which is a enormous entry on the plus side of the list.

    Pointing out that people don't need a superior product is just pathetic, and no good intentioned person would say it.
  • dugbug - Wednesday, September 18, 2013 - link

    I think you ignored the rational response and countered with a snide comment. Samsung is only a processor licensee I believe, and have chosen to forsake their own CPUs for others. I don't know why, but they tend to be all over the map. Apple has a deep, patient, meticulous plan for their products and invest heavily to see it move forward. If you don't like apple, whatever I don't care, but they tend to drive the mobile industry.

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