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Profile ABnormAL

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Message 1303957 - Posted: 9 Nov 2012, 12:10:20 UTC

hello
this is one of my pcs

CPU type
GenuineIntel
Intel(R) Core(TM) i7 CPU 970 @ 3.20GHz [Family 6 Model 44 Stepping 2]
Number of processors
12
Coprocessors
NVIDIA GeForce GTX 680 (4095MB) driver: 306.94
Operating System
Microsoft Windows 7
Ultimate x64 Edition, Service Pack 1, (06.01.7601.00)
BOINC version
7.0.28
Memory
24567.18 MB
Cache
256 KB
Measured floating point speed
3129.49 million ops/sec
Measured integer speed
10156.24 million ops/sec

just want to know whet is Measured floating point speed and Measured integer speed mean ???? and is that for all cores ?
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Message 1303990 - Posted: 9 Nov 2012, 13:59:09 UTC - in response to Message 1303957.  

BOINC has a built-in CPU test. Those are what it gets (per core) on your CPU.
Don't know how it compares with other apps that measure the same things.
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Josef W. Segur
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Message 1304154 - Posted: 9 Nov 2012, 19:35:18 UTC - in response to Message 1303957.  

...
Measured floating point speed
3129.49 million ops/sec
Measured integer speed
10156.24 million ops/sec

just want to know whet is Measured floating point speed and Measured integer speed mean ???? and is that for all cores ?

They're scores from BOINC's versions of the Whetstone and Dhrystone benchmarks. The scores represent performance of one logical core. The original design was to run each benchmark simultaneously on all cores you've told BOINC to use. That is how Whetstones actually are run, but it turned out that on Windows the Dhrystone benchmark was very variable when run that way so it is restricted to a single core.

The Whetstone benchmark actually consists of 8 subtests, only 5 of which use floating point operations. The weighting of the subtests was also set to best match the kind of work being done on computers running Algol 60 in 1972 at the National Physical Laboratory in the United Kingdom. Nevertheless, ~79% of the score is from floating point so it does represent an approximation of the non-SIMD floating point performance.

The Dhrystone benchmark is only 28 years old and is strictly integer, but has other known shortcomings when compiled from C source and run on modern CPUs. That doesn't really matter at this point, the score is not used for anything by BOINC now.
                                                                  Joe
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Message 1304889 - Posted: 11 Nov 2012, 12:40:05 UTC - in response to Message 1303957.  

Its two different ways to benchmark your computer, (sorry i dont know more about it), and its Per "core", in your case, per tread :)
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Message boards : Number crunching : cpu stats


 
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