CFD Online Logo CFD Online URL
www.cfd-online.com
[Sponsors]
Home > Forums > General Forums > Hardware

Milan VS Ice Lake

Register Blogs Community New Posts Updated Threads Search

Like Tree3Likes
  • 1 Post By Simbelmynė
  • 2 Post By flotus1

Reply
 
LinkBack Thread Tools Search this Thread Display Modes
Old   January 6, 2022, 19:44
Default Milan VS Ice Lake
  #1
New Member
 
Join Date: Nov 2018
Location: USA
Posts: 9
Rep Power: 7
zwilhoit is on a distinguished road
Hi All,

$10k budget, primary app is FloTHERM. Based on in-stock availability and pricing in my current location, I've narrowed my search down to one of these two options:

2x Epyc 7443 (24c Milan)

2x Xeon Gold 6366Y (24c Ice Lake)

Milan pros:
- ~15% higher ST performance (simulation initialization, radiation calcs)
- More cache

Ice Lake pros:
- Arguably better memory subsystem (see STREAM Triad benchmarks)
- AVX 512 (which I don't currently need)
- Dual socket Haswell system has had good scaling for us in FloTHERM. Dual socket EPYC 7301 (1st gen, 8 NUMA nodes) had poor performance...

Haven't seen a lot of discussion here on Ice Lake. Any recommendations?

Thanks,

Zachary
zwilhoit is offline   Reply With Quote

Old   January 7, 2022, 05:45
Default
  #2
Senior Member
 
Simbelmynė's Avatar
 
Join Date: May 2012
Posts: 546
Rep Power: 15
Simbelmynė is on a distinguished road
We do not have much data on Ice Lake Xeons in terms of CFD. 8380 seems to be about 30% faster than 8280 when used in OpenFOAM, however that is not a 1:1 comparison. I do not know how the FloTHERM load is on the CPU/Memory. Is it possible for the manufacturer to run some tests for you before you purchase?


If you do go with the Ice Lake option (btw I guess you mean 6336Y, not 6366Y?) then this article may be interesting to read:


https://www.phoronix.com/scan.php?pa...clear-21&num=1
zwilhoit likes this.
Simbelmynė is offline   Reply With Quote

Old   January 7, 2022, 06:21
Default
  #3
Super Moderator
 
flotus1's Avatar
 
Alex
Join Date: Jun 2012
Location: Germany
Posts: 3,399
Rep Power: 46
flotus1 has a spectacular aura aboutflotus1 has a spectacular aura about
If you had a really bad time with 1st gen Epyc CPUs with your particular software, the safe option would definitely be to stick with Intel for now.
Rome and Milan had some improvements to alleviate the worst-case scenarios for Naples. But they are still multi-chip designs, and you can't hide that entirely. Ice Lake is still a monolithic design, with all the advantages for software that is not quite ready for NUMA-heavy platforms.

What Intel did with the memory subsystem for Ice lake sounds really nice on paper and in stream, but I haven't seen it translate to real-world performance gains yet. IIRC, the Ice Lake results in the OpenFOAM benchmark thread were a bit disappointing. Don't get me wrong, they will get the job done. But I would have expected more based on the synthetic benchmarks. I guess huge caches still help AMDs CPUs a lot for CFD.

Unfortunately, the only way to be sure with this kind of niche software is to run some tests yourself. That would also factor in which models you typically run, and which parts of the workflow are most time-critical for you. If that's just not an option, stick with the safer solution - Intel.
aparangement and zwilhoit like this.
flotus1 is offline   Reply With Quote

Old   February 6, 2022, 23:04
Default
  #4
New Member
 
Velda Hwang
Join Date: Feb 2022
Posts: 1
Rep Power: 0
veldahwang is on a distinguished road
Quote:
Originally Posted by Simbelmynė View Post
We do not have much data on Ice Lake Xeons in terms of CFD. 8380 seems to be about 30% faster than 8280 when used in OpenFOAM, however that is not a 1:1 comparison. I do not know how the FloTHERM load is on the CPU/Memory. Is it possible for the manufacturer to run some tests for you before you purchase?


If you do go with the Ice Lake option (btw I guess you mean 6336Y, not 6366Y?) then this article may be interesting to read:


https://www.phoronix.com/scan.php?pa...clear-21&num=1
Thanks, that is exactly what I wanted to know.
veldahwang is offline   Reply With Quote

Old   April 24, 2022, 02:04
Default
  #5
New Member
 
Guangyu Zhu
Join Date: May 2013
Posts: 12
Rep Power: 12
bravebear is on a distinguished road
dual xeon 8375C would be a good option for 10K budget
bravebear is offline   Reply With Quote

Reply


Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

BB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off
Trackbacks are Off
Pingbacks are On
Refbacks are On


Similar Threads
Thread Thread Starter Forum Replies Last Post
Benchmarks for Ice Lake SP Andrew2 Hardware 3 October 7, 2021 01:45
ice melting simulation combine Solidification and VOF model wuxuetianzi FLUENT 3 November 18, 2018 21:03
ice melting simulation pratikmehta ANSYS 3 April 17, 2013 09:52
Ice melting Simulation pratikmehta CFX 13 February 29, 2012 21:14
Freezing of an Ice Cream 10mmet21 Main CFD Forum 0 February 28, 2012 07:15


All times are GMT -4. The time now is 11:12.