Friday 25 January 2019

cpu - Intel turbo boost - in reality


I have an Intel i7-3630QM processor in my laptop. Its speed is supposed to be from 2.4 to 3.4 GHz in turbo boost mode.


In reality, will it ever run all cores on full speed (3.4GHz mentioned above) at the same time?


I heard somewhere that this additional 1GHz is shared between all cores in laptops. If the boost is 1GHz per core it's pretty impressive (over 40% speed up). What does it really look like? How long can a processor run in turbo mode?



Answer



Intel Turbo Boost only boosts the speed if the processor is not fully utilized. Their site is pretty vague on details, but I remember seeing that it's designed for when one core is being maxed out while the other cores are sitting idle. If you're using multiple cores, the processor is drawing too much power, or the processor is too hot, then Intel Turbo Boost will turn off and the processor will return to it's normal maximum speed.


All cores will technically be running at the full speed, but you can't utilize all the cores at the same time while boosted or the processor will return to the normal maximum.



Intel® Turbo Boost Technology provides more performance when needed on 4th generation Intel® Core™ processor-based systems. Intel® Turbo Boost Technology 2.0 automatically allows processor cores to run faster than the base operating frequency if they’re operating below power, current, and temperature specification limits.


Any of the following can set the upper limit of Intel Turbo Boost Technology 2.0 on a given workload:



  • Number of active cores

  • Estimated current consumption

  • Estimated power consumption

  • Processor temperature



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