A Bigger, Faster, More Powerful GPU
As mentioned earlier, the GPU sees a significant shift as we move from a Mali T880MP4 to a Mali-G71MP8, which essentially doubles the number of shader cores employed. HiSilicon decision to go with a wider GPU on the same process node was undoubtedly made much easier by the new G71's much better die area efficiency. The new GPU runs at 900 MHz, the same as the older SoC. The combination of doubling the shader cores over the 950 and moving to a new architecture over the 950 results in a 180% increase in the GPU's performance compared to the Kirin 950.
As a result, Huawei is positioning the Kirin 960 directly above the other high-end SoCs launched this year (though we expect the other SoC vendors to also have respective increases with new generations soon). GFXBench Manhattan 3.0 and T-Rex Offscreen scores were showing the performance of the G71MP8 in above both the Snapdragon 820 and the Exynos 8890, but a tad under the new A10.
One of the popular criticisms of previous Huawei SoCs is the lack of graphics horsepower, with designs often opting for a four-core 'MP4' configuration despite using the high-performance graphics cores available from ARM. An MP4 configuration kept the die size of the SoC small and easier to implement. The downside of this is typically efficiency, suggesting that high graphics loads with fewer cores run at a worse point of the power efficiency curve to get an acceptable result.
Arguably most graphics scenarios on a smartphone, apart from extreme gaming titles and VR, can easily be provided by an MP4 configuration, and that was HiSilicon's main rationale for past GPU configurations. However as Huawei devices mature and get more premium, there is also the fact that when buying a device above $450, the user should expect something performing near the best in the market, and it was clear that an MP4 design could not do that. The fact that the Kirin 960 moves to an MP8 design, while increasing die area and maximum power consumption, means that a Kirin SoC moves up to compete with larger GPU configurations such as Samsung's large Mali designs in Exynos SoCs, Qualcomm's Adreno in the Snapdragons, or the 6-cluster PowerVR GPU in Apple's A-series. The mention of higher maximum power consumption comes with rather mixed feelings as the reasonably low GPU power was one of the aspects of the Kirin 950 that we especially praised when compared to other SoC designs, so we'll have to wait to see real devices to see if this improvement isn't a double-edged sword that introduces more severe GPU thermal throttling to the Kirin lineup.
Nevertheless, the improvement paves the way for things like VR, especially given Google's recent announcement of Daydream VR (starting with the Snapdragon 821 in the Google Pixel smartphone). With the right software support and display, we would expect all future devices using the Kirin 960 to support Daydream VR.
With API support, the Kirin 960 will be promoted with Vulkan.
New Category 12/13 Modem with a Custom CDMA Implementation
The Kirin 960 also features a new HiSilicon based modem, allowing up to LTE UE Category 12/13 connectivity for up to 600 Mbps transfers, equaling the specifications of Qualcomm's Snapdragon 820 or Samsung's Exynos 8890 modems. The modem is being promoted as the first commercial SoC to provide quad carrier aggregation to meet that speed, although it will obviously require carrier support in the region in order to do so. The modem supports 4x4 MIMO (at only 2xCA) as well as up to 256QAM spatial stream modulation.
One of the more interesting announcements from the Kirin briefing was the implementation of CDMA in the modem. Currently three smartphone modem providers have CDMA solutions (Qualcomm in integrated and discrete modems, Intel with discrete, Mediatek with VIA-based integrated), and we spoke with HiSilicon to confirm that this is a brand new custom CDMA solution, rather than a licensed platform. The value of CDMA is mixed, although a required element with certain carriers in China and the US, such that Huawei can now offer devices with the Kirin 960 can compete. It should be pointed out that CDMA certification for the US via the FCC takes 18-24 months, and I was unable to confirm when the process was started, so we may have to wait another year for a US-focused CDMA devices.
We noticed that previous Kirin modem designs were made under the 'Balong' name, however the name is dropped for this model. We were told that Balong is an old brand, and it was being dropped at this performance level, although it is unclear if the modem in the Kirin 960 or future SoCs will be branded. This may be related to the fact that when asked about the presence of CEVA LTE IP in the modem similar to previous models, we were told that the LTE design in the new modem is a custom internal design without CEVA.
The multimedia capabilities of the new SoC have also seen a great improvement as we finally see 4K recording made possible. The new chipset supports 4K30 HEVC/H.265 decoding and encoding. The camera ISP is improved as well and brings new features natively supporting dual-sensor RGB/Monochrome configurations such as found on the Huawei P9 and Honor 8. Previously these had relied on an additional external ISP chipset to make use of the new monochrome sensor.
A Good Showing
Naturally we expect Huawei's next generation flagships to implement the Kirin 960 and variants over the next few months, especially as we move more towards Mobile World Congress in February. Similarly, updates to Kirin such as clock speed increases (the 955 is +200 MHz over the 950) moving into the middle of next year, along with an Honor device or two as time goes on. Huawei still keeps its HiSilicon SoC portfolio purely in-house, such that other smartphone OEMs do not have access to it, and given Huawei's current success in unit sales and revenue, we would expect the continue the status quo on this front.
As perhaps was to be expected, when we asked Huawei about competitor's 10nm plans (especially in light of recent news), no official statement was made. It's very hard to not try to theorise comparisons between the Kirin 960 and next year's Exynos and Snapdragons, while the former does bring substantial improvements to the table, it'll be a hard fight competing against the new generation. Given Huawei and HiSilicon's semiconductor product cycles, we might expect to hear more when TSMC's foundry business starts making more public noise about the availability of future nodes and silicon mass production (or even Intel, depending on relationships). We will probably have to tune in next year, perhaps at a similar time, and there may be more concrete news about chipset roadmaps.
We expect the first devices to use the Kirin 960 to come out shortly.
Further Reading
Andrei's Analysis of the ARM Cortex-A73 'Artemis' CPU Microarchitecture
Ryan's Analysis of the ARM Mali-G71 'Bifrost' GPU Architecture
The Huawei Mate 8 Review
The Honor 8 / Huawei P9 Review
jjj
- Wednesday, October 19, 2016 -
link
Do remember that 10nm SoCs are some 5 months ahead so if Mate 9 launches next month, still 4 months to go.
TSMC said last week (check the Q3 call transcript on their site) "We have transferred our 10-nanometer from R&D to production in third quarter this year. Our first 10-nanometer customer product has been produced with reasonable yield. Defect density and device performance continue to improve in much the same way as we did at the ramp-up stage of every leading edge technology node
So far we have received five production tapeouts for high-end mobile products. We are preparing capacity for 10-nanometer production ramp up by the end of this year and expect shipment in first quarter next year."
You make it sound like we don't know much about TSMC's timing, had to fix that.
Y-day Honor x6 launched with Kirin 655. It's a minor upgrade over 650 but could get a mention.
Was expecting this one at 2.6GHz, maybe they bump the clocks next year when other launch 10nm.
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