Render engines
bashrag_7b41cbcd6d
Posts: 71
I know that this is sort of off topic, but there's no where I could really ask. Is there a render engine that can take advantage of the multithreading available on the new AMD Bulldozer chips?
I've been an AMD guy since way back, and it's bothering me that in this generation I've really got no choice but to go Intel. Does anybody know if 3dDelight is even going to show a significant difference between Intel and AMD for still renders?
Thanks for the time.
Post edited by bashrag_7b41cbcd6d on
Comments
DS uses what ever you got - using AMD 8 cores here - fast enough for me
It would appear that even Windows 7 currently doesn't support the "Module" approach of Bulldozer, but Windows 8 does. So no renderer that relies on the OS to manage threads, i.e. all of them (as far as I know), will use them all for now. There may a pacth for Windows 7 in the near future, though. Out of curiosity how many cores do you manage to use in a render?
I think he's referring to Bulldozer's unique approach to SMT. Sadly empirical evidence shows that the approach in Bulldozer isn't anywhere near as efficient as traditional designs on a per core (module in Bulldozer parlance) basis. If that's bugginess is the code or a fundamental flaw, it's not for me to say, but what we know is this:
Source:
The newer Trinity line has improved things somewhat, but even he top of the line trinity only makes 6th place on PCMarks 7 when compared to the competing i7s and i5s scoring around 3325 compared to the "king of the hill" i7-3720s 6695. In the computation sub-mark test, it really, really gets trounced. The i7-3720s score is 27261 while the Trinity comes in at 4323.
As an Austinite I love AMD and historically I've owned dozens of them, but they just aren't up to the muscle of the Intels and muscle is what you're after for CPU rendering. Keep in mind, none of this means that the AMDs are bad. In fact, they're still quite solid. For what you pay for them they are quite efficient on a cost-to-performance ratio. The point of this was only that if ultimate performance is the goal and money is no object then Intel currently holds the crown.
For what it's worth DS will see all 12 of the cores on my system (24 if you include hyperthreaded cores).