An In-Depth Look at Computer Performance Growth
Report, 2004

It is a common belief that computer performance growth is over 50% annually, or that performance doubles every 18-20 months. By analyzing publicly available results from the SPEC integer (CINT) benchmark suites, we conclude that this was true between 1985 and 1996 the early years of the RISC paradigm. During the last 7.5 years (1996-2004), however, performance growth has slowed down to 41%, with signs of a continuing decline. Meanwhile, clock frequency has improved with about 29% annually. The improvement in clock frequency was enabled both by an annual device speed scaling of 20% as well as by longer pipelines with a lower gate-depth in each stage. This paper takes a fresh look at and tries to remove the confusion about performance scaling that exists in the computer architecture community.

Author

Magnus Ekman

Chalmers, Department of Computer Engineering, Computer Architecture

Fredrik Warg

Chalmers, Department of Computer Engineering, Computer Architecture

Jim Nilsson

Chalmers, Department of Computer Engineering, Computer Architecture

Subject Categories

Computer Engineering

Technical report - Chalmers University of Technology, Department of Computer Engineering, Göteborg: 9

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Created

10/6/2017