The Downfall vulnerability was recently reported to have compromised several Intel CPUs leading to serious security backdoor implications and the mitigations were expected to have performance impacts. Phoronix has now published benchmarks of the vulnerability's mitigation, demonstrating the effects of "Downfall."
While we have put up a detailed report on Intel's Downfall vulnerability, for a quick recap, the vulnerability specifically affects workloads utilizing the AVX2/AVX-512 gather instructions. Intel disclosed that "Downfall" had a greater impact on older-gen Tiger Lake/ Ice Lake lineups. In easy words, the vulnerability reveals hardware registry contents, potentially leading to large-scale data thefts.
To solve the issue, Intel released microcode mitigation, which brought in performance impacts on a large level. Initially, the effects of mitigation were unknown. However, Phoronix went out of the way and tested the impacted CPUs to give an idea of how detrimental the vulnerability is. They test Intel's Xeon Platinum 8380, Xeon Gold 6226R, and the Core i7-1165G7. All three processors were exposed to the vulnerability; hence if you want to know whether your CPU is impacted, you can view the complete list provided by Intel.
Moving on to the benchmarks, the Xeon Platinum 8380 was observed in various instances, with the old "390" and the new "3a5" microcodes. As predicted, the processor saw a performance decline in all scenarios. In OpenVKL, the performance drop was recorded at 6%, while in OSPRay 1.2, it reached 34%. AI workloads oversaw a vast drop, with applications such as Neural Magic DeepSparse 1.5, which was expected given that the HPC workloads were predicted to drop.
Coming to the Intel Xeon Gold 6226R CPUs, as
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