What exactly does that mean? Similar to what Arm has been doing in the mobile space for a long while now, the idea is to combine high performance cores with power efficient cores in the same package, and dole out tasks accordingly. Arm's own branding for this approach is called big.LITTLE (the "big" refers to the high performance cores and the "LITTLE" points to the power efficient cores).
That said, AMD has clearly taken inspiration from Arm's branding, because in its patent application, it refers to "Big processor(s)" and "Little processor(s)" and selectively moving tasks between the two. AMD posits that by using finer-grained tracking and decision making, it can essentially optimize the performance per watt.
"To relocate the one or more tasks from the first processor to the second processor, the first processor is stalled and state information from the first processor is copied to the second processor," AMD explains in its patent application. "The second processor uses the state information and then services incoming tasks instead of the first processor."
The patent goes on to describe several different examples of how this could be implemented on a technical basis, which involves various criteria (or metrics) for determining when a tasked should be handed over to the more powerful core(s) and when it should transition over to the more power efficient core(s).
Interestingly, the patent also highlights that this does not necessarily have to involve two different types of CPU cores, and instead could entail shuffling tasks between the CPU and GPU.
"Although in some of the examples...a relatively less powerful processor and a relatively more powerful processor are described, any two or more heterogeneous processor may be used. For example, tasks from a CPU core are relocated to a GPU core, or vice versa," AMD states in its patent. "It should be understood that many variations are possible."
We have some time to wait before we see if this patent bears fruit. That's because Zen 4 is not a hybrid architecture. This is something AMD is said to be saving for Zen 5, codenamed Strix Point, which will underpin its Ryzen 8000 series in 2024.
June 13, 2021 at 09:38PM
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AMD Patents big.Little Core Task Transition Tech For Ryzen 8000 Zen 5 Processors - Hot Hardware
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