How does Boinc affect the speed of the computer i.e. how can I turn it off?

Questions and Answers : Macintosh : How does Boinc affect the speed of the computer i.e. how can I turn it off?
Message board moderation

To post messages, you must log in.

AuthorMessage
David

Send message
Joined: 13 Dec 01
Posts: 6
Credit: 4,534
RAC: 0
United States
Message 82294 - Posted: 25 Feb 2005, 22:43:52 UTC

Hi Guys,

I just switched from the classic program which ran in the background, although I had it setup to start at the startup of the computer, there were situations (i.e. processor intensive tasks or when I thought the computer was sluggish) when I turned the seti program off.

Do I still have to "turn off" or does this new version somehow go into "sleep mode" when I'm doing other tasks?

OR do I have to manually shut it down and if yes, how would I go about?

Thanks,

David
ID: 82294 · Report as offensive
C

Send message
Joined: 3 Apr 99
Posts: 240
Credit: 7,716,977
RAC: 0
United States
Message 82350 - Posted: 26 Feb 2005, 0:49:17 UTC

The BOINC software operates at a very low priority, so if you are using the computer for something else, BOINC gives up the CPU time to the other apps when they need it. You can easily watch this - go to your Applications/Utilities folder and start up Activity Monitor. Pull down the menu MONITOR and select SHOW ACTIVITY MONITOR. Click on the CPU button near the bottom left and you can watch the different processes/applications use the CPU. When BOINC is using most of the resources, just move the cursor in a small circle, click on another window that's open, and watch the CPU percentage shift from BOINC to something else.

C

Join Team MacNN
ID: 82350 · Report as offensive
C

Send message
Joined: 3 Apr 99
Posts: 240
Credit: 7,716,977
RAC: 0
United States
Message 82375 - Posted: 26 Feb 2005, 2:26:42 UTC

Forgot to mention...if you do need to turn off BOINC, just click on the terminal window to make it the active window and then type a "control-c". This will pause BOINC. To really quit, type "exit" and press Return. To continue a run from the paused state, just type "./boinc_4.19_ppcG4" or whatever the name of the version you are running, and press return, and BOINC will resume.

While paused, you can see the various commands you can send to BOINC by typing
"./boinc_4.19_ppcG4 -help" (use your BOINC version here) and press return.

To avoid having to type a long BOINC name each time, I simply type "./boinc*" and hit return. [in case you have trouble reading the font, that's "dot-slash-boinc-asterisk". This works because my BOINC folder only has one file in it that begins with "boinc"...

Hope this helps you.

C

Join Team MacNN
ID: 82375 · Report as offensive
David

Send message
Joined: 13 Dec 01
Posts: 6
Credit: 4,534
RAC: 0
United States
Message 82498 - Posted: 26 Feb 2005, 7:44:39 UTC - in response to Message 82350.  

Thanks C for the quick response. Does that mean, if I'm running a browser, email client and a word processor that Bionc will run only very slowly or will it use ALL the remaining processor power since these wouldn't be very intensive tasks?

David
ID: 82498 · Report as offensive
C

Send message
Joined: 3 Apr 99
Posts: 240
Credit: 7,716,977
RAC: 0
United States
Message 82585 - Posted: 26 Feb 2005, 14:48:03 UTC

BOINC will use all the remailing power. Open up your browser, emailer, and WP and then look at the CPU allocations in Activity Monitor - you'll see how SETI loses the resource whenever one of the others demands it. For example, on my PowerBook, when Eudora is actually downloading email, CPU allocations change from 90% SETI and 1% Eudora to around 60% SETI and 30% Eudora. As soon as the email finishes downloading, the allocation goes back to 90% SETI and 1% Eudora.

C

Join Team MacNN
ID: 82585 · Report as offensive
David

Send message
Joined: 13 Dec 01
Posts: 6
Credit: 4,534
RAC: 0
United States
Message 82630 - Posted: 26 Feb 2005, 16:43:36 UTC - in response to Message 82585.  

Perfect! I checked and it worked like a charm! As a followup for other users (not C since he seems to know everything :) -> are there intelligent life forms on other planets ? :) )

Another way to turn the boinc off is to use an addon program called deep thought (versiontracker.com) if you quit this application it seems to also turn off the BOINC units.


ID: 82630 · Report as offensive
Profile toffuuu
Volunteer tester

Send message
Joined: 30 Mar 00
Posts: 87
Credit: 1,887,469
RAC: 0
United States
Message 82755 - Posted: 26 Feb 2005, 20:42:38 UTC - in response to Message 82498.  
Last modified: 26 Feb 2005, 20:43:45 UTC

> Thanks C for the quick response. Does that mean, if I'm running a browser,
> email client and a word processor that Bionc will run only very slowly or will
> it use ALL the remaining processor power since these wouldn't be very
> intensive tasks?
>
> David

Hey, I would suggest useing top with the terminal app instead of the activity moniter, its a bit more accurate and well will tell you what apps and so on are using the CPU and at what %, and other things like Memory and other stuff
as an example
Welcome to Darwin!
Matt:~ mattruth$ top (then press return) then it will look something like this...
Processes: 64 total, 3 running, 61 sleeping... 161 threads 14:40:51
Load Avg: 1.65, 1.32, 1.18 CPU usage: 75.8% user, 24.2% sys, 0.0% idle
SharedLibs: num = 123, resident = 38.4M code, 2.90M data, 12.4M LinkEdit
MemRegions: num = 8130, resident = 133M + 10.2M private, 91.2M shared
PhysMem: 58.1M wired, 204M active, 154M inactive, 417M used, 94.2M free
VM: 3.80G + 82.1M 122679(0) pageins, 88433(0) pageouts

PID COMMAND %CPU TIME #TH #PRTS #MREGS RPRVT RSHRD RSIZE VSIZE
2286 top 13.2% 0:02.98 1 16 25 272K 492K 672K 27.1M
2283 bash 0.0% 0:00.05 1 12 15 192K 912K 780K 18.2M
2282 login 0.0% 0:00.05 1 13 37 140K 484K 508K 26.9M
2279 einstein_4 19.2% 23:27.30 2 14 42 3.87M 1.46M 5.37M 44.2M
2269 httpd 0.0% 0:00.00 1 9 81 68K 1.75M 520K 27.8M
2255 httpd 0.0% 0:00.02 1 10 83 300K 1.75M 1.17M 27.8M

hope this also helps...
ID: 82755 · Report as offensive

Questions and Answers : Macintosh : How does Boinc affect the speed of the computer i.e. how can I turn it off?


 
©2024 University of California
 
SETI@home and Astropulse are funded by grants from the National Science Foundation, NASA, and donations from SETI@home volunteers. AstroPulse is funded in part by the NSF through grant AST-0307956.