Sabtu, 28 Desember 2013

Samsung Exynos to announce their next SoC at CES 2014 (Update)

Folks over at Samsung Exynos have just started to post teasers for their event at CES 2014 in Las Vegas. As always, Samsung Exynos will be announcing their next generation SoCs, hopefully also unveiling the much rumoured 64-bit chip as well. But, the thing which strikes us the most about their tweet is the hashtag, ‘#UnlockExynos’.
— SamsungExynos (@SamsungExynos) December 27, 2013
It could potentially mean that Samsung might update their previous SoCs featuring ARM’s big.LITTLE technology with Heterogeneous Multi-Processing (HMP) Capability. Let me explain this a little more in detail.
Currently, Samsung’s SoCs featuring ARM’s big.LITTLE technology work in 2 clusters, one cluster of low-performance cores with low power consumption and one cluster of high-performance cores with high power consumption, all cores can’t be activated at ones. So, what the software actually does is it uses low-performance cores for daily day-to-day tasks, like: email, messaging, calls etc, and uses high-performance cores for CPU extensive tasks. Also, sometimes the software uses the cluster of high-performance cores at the start of an application to simply decrease the initial loading time and then the software switches back to the cluster low-performance cores.
However, what the software is unable to do is that it can’t activate all CPU cores or selective CPU cores from both ‘big’ and ‘LITTLE’ clusters simultaneously. So, this is where Heterogeneous Multi-Processing (HMP) comes into play. With HMP, all eight of the CPU cores in the Exynos 5 Octa SoC can be utilised at the same time. Using a global load balancing scheduler, HMP can assign a single core to handle a task with low computational intensity in order to maximize power efficiency.
Exynos5
The good news is that Samsung’s Exynos 5 Octa SoC already features HMP capability but it’s been disabled as there is no support at the software side (kernel), but it’s relatively easy to enable this feature in existing devices sporting an Exynos 5 Octa SoC. Samsung Exynos just needs to add support for HMP in the kernel and push it via a software update to the device and voila!
We are really excited for this event and can’t wait to see what Samsung Exynos has accomplished with their next generation SoCs.
UPDATE: We have just received info that the existing Exynos 5 Octa (Exynos 5410), the one in the Galaxy S4, is missing HMP implementation at both hardware and software level so it is impossible to activate HMP on it. While Exynos 5 Octa (Exynos 5420), the one in the Galaxy Note 3, does feature HMP at hardware level but the software implementation is missing and we can’t confirm if Samsung will activate it in the near future. However, we can surely confirm that Exynos 6 will definitely have HMP activated out of the box.

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