Outertech has discovered that tying some Windows applications to the first Ryzen 7 CPU CCX group (4 physical + 4 virtual processor cores) can increase the performance by a significant factor, as thread switching between two CCX groups is avoided.
#ALTERNATIVES TO CACHEMAN FOR WINDOWS MANUAL#
A range of computer performance profiles is available including gaming, graphics workstation, digital audio recording, notebook, and server.Īfter a discovery made in the testing lab Outertech recommends an additional manual optimization that can be performed within the Cacheman user interface. In addition to the already built-in Intel Core processor optimization, Cacheman 10.10 updates the optimization profiles for AMD Ryzen 7 1700, 1700X, 1800X and Ryzen 5 1400, 1500X, 1600, 1600X processors. Communication between cores that sit on separate CCX groups is significantly slower (by the factor of 2 and more).Ĭacheman (short for Cache manager) auto-optimizes the Windows sub-systems including cache and memory in order to improve responsiveness, privacy, and security. Within a CCX group, CPU cores can communicate very quickly with each other. The speed of the crossbar is linked to the speed of the system memory. The two groups are interconnected with a 256-bit wide bi-directional crossbar. The physical processor cores are placed on the CPU die in two groups of 4 cores each, the so called CCX (CPU Complex). The AMD Ryzen 7 processors consist of 16 CPU cores - 8 physical and 8 virtual (emulated) cores. A free test version is available from the Outertech website. The new Cacheman version introduces support for the recently released AMD Ryzen 7 1700, 1700X, 1800X and Ryzen 5 1400, 1500X, 1600, 1600X processors. Outertech has released Cacheman 10.10, a Windows performance enhancement software that uses one-click optimization in order to improve responsiveness, privacy, and the security of a PC.