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Number crunching :
GPU FLOPS: Theory vs Reality
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juan BFP Send message Joined: 16 Mar 07 Posts: 9786 Credit: 572,710,851 RAC: 3,799 |
Excellent work Shaggie. As expected the clear winners in credit/watt performance are the 1650Ti or not, 2060 super & 2070 as expected. @Tom You just need to remember this graphs are made with GPU who run stock builds, not the ones we use. In our case we expect similar performances but that is to be proved. |
Tom M Send message Joined: 28 Nov 02 Posts: 5126 Credit: 276,046,078 RAC: 462 |
Excellent work Shaggie. +1 As expected the clear winners if credit/watt performance are the 1650Ti or not, 2060 super & 2070 as expected. I understand that the graphs don't include the "beta test" apps like the petri/tBars special sauce. I am counting on a large enough sample that any extreme results will not be very noticeable. Back when the gtx 750Ti was the king of the efficiency hill I got pretty good results with the "special sauce". So this is a relative scale of competitiveness rather than an absolute predictor of watts/performance. I am comfortable with the results. Tom A proud member of the OFA (Old Farts Association). |
Wiggo Send message Joined: 24 Jan 00 Posts: 36850 Credit: 261,360,520 RAC: 489 |
I understand that the graphs don't include the "beta test" apps like the petri/tBars special sauce. I am counting on a large enough sample that any extreme results will not be very noticeable.Actually it doesn't count any of us who run under the "Anonymous Platform" banner (only those who run fully stock setups get counted). ;-) Cheers. |
catavalon21 Send message Joined: 2 Nov 01 Posts: 13 Credit: 7,238,152 RAC: 48 |
Thanks for the update. I have been scouring the used market for a 1080, and am blown away that that 1660ti goes nearly toe to toe with it. Very impressive. Rethinking the path forward, that's for sure. Thank you for this info - it's awesome! |
Grant (SSSF) Send message Joined: 19 Aug 99 Posts: 13855 Credit: 208,696,464 RAC: 304 |
Thanks for the update. I have been scouring the used market for a 1080, and am blown away that that 1660ti goes nearly toe to toe with it. Very impressive. Rethinking the path forward, that's for sure.And although it's not on the list yet (since it's just been released) the GTX 1660 Super is meant to be on par (or even slightly better) than the 1660Ti, and it's cheaper. Grant Darwin NT |
Grant (SSSF) Send message Joined: 19 Aug 99 Posts: 13855 Credit: 208,696,464 RAC: 304 |
The RTX 2060 and 2070 SUPERs are included now -- some excellent performance for both of them depending on what you're looking for.Thanks again for your efforts. Grant Darwin NT |
Shaggie76 Send message Joined: 9 Oct 09 Posts: 282 Credit: 271,858,118 RAC: 196 |
Thanks for the update. I have been scouring the used market for a 1080, and am blown away that that 1660ti goes nearly toe to toe with it. Very impressive. Rethinking the path forward, that's for sure.And although it's not on the list yet (since it's just been released) the GTX 1660 Super is meant to be on par (or even slightly better) than the 1660Ti, and it's cheaper. I just checked and in the last scan there were four GTX 1660 SUPERs -- I'll give it a few weeks and scan again. |
catavalon21 Send message Joined: 2 Nov 01 Posts: 13 Credit: 7,238,152 RAC: 48 |
Agreed. Legacy data will always still be posted here. Go for it! |
catavalon21 Send message Joined: 2 Nov 01 Posts: 13 Credit: 7,238,152 RAC: 48 |
I just checked and in the last scan there were four GTX 1660 SUPERs -- I'll give it a few weeks and scan again. Much appreciated. |
Grant (SSSF) Send message Joined: 19 Aug 99 Posts: 13855 Credit: 208,696,464 RAC: 304 |
I just checked and in the last scan there were four GTX 1660 SUPERs -- I'll give it a few weeks and scan again.People certainly aren't wasting any time putting those in their systems (it's also nice that they're actually available, and at a reasonable price). Grant Darwin NT |
juan BFP Send message Joined: 16 Mar 07 Posts: 9786 Credit: 572,710,851 RAC: 3,799 |
I just checked and in the last scan there were four GTX 1660 SUPERs -- I'll give it a few weeks and scan again.People certainly aren't wasting any time putting those in their systems (it's also nice that they're actually available, and at a reasonable price). I just not imagine why somebody uses this new GPU's and choose to run stock apps. This is IMHO something to think about. If you look the list of the top hosts most of them uses optimized apps (Linux, Windows, or whatever) , so you not sum to the numbers them, in theory, most optimized hosts. They rely reflects the real performance of the GPU's/CPU's combinations. And there are another variable on the equation, the mining hosts who has huge amounts of GPU's driven normally by relatively small CPU's. |
rob smith Send message Joined: 7 Mar 03 Posts: 22536 Credit: 416,307,556 RAC: 380 |
It is quite simple to understand, choose from any one of: - Not everyone knows about the optimised application, - - Not everyone wants to run Linux, - Many people are in the "fit and forget" camp, and just let BOINC do what BOINC does, - Not everyone is allowed to run Linux, - Not everyone can run Linux. I dare say there are more reasons, but those will do for starters. Bob Smith Member of Seti PIPPS (Pluto is a Planet Protest Society) Somewhere in the (un)known Universe? |
juan BFP Send message Joined: 16 Mar 07 Posts: 9786 Credit: 572,710,851 RAC: 3,799 |
I'm not talking only about Linux, there are Windows Optimized apps too. I'm sure you know that. BTW I'm not a Linux fan, i only use Linux on my main cruncher because the apps are rely a lot faster. The rest of my computers uses Windows. <edit> - Not everyone knows about the optimised application, - IMHO that's a shame, if they exist and are faster than the stock apps and produce valid science, their use must be encouraged! But this all is out topic. Sorry Shaggie76 |
Ian&Steve C. Send message Joined: 28 Sep 99 Posts: 4267 Credit: 1,282,604,591 RAC: 6,640 |
It is quite simple to understand, choose from any one of: The optimized apps encompass much more than just the special app. What Juan is talking about, is how the scans do not capture anything Anonymous Platform, that includes the people who have used the Lunatics installers. Seti@Home classic workunits: 29,492 CPU time: 134,419 hours |
Richard Haselgrove Send message Joined: 4 Jul 99 Posts: 14679 Credit: 200,643,578 RAC: 874 |
IMHO that's a shame, if they exist and are faster than the stock apps and produce valid science, their use must be encouraged!Since we're talking about GPUs, the Windows stock apps are the same as the Lunatics installer apps. Lunatics supplied the optimised apps to the project for use as stock. Only the CPU apps are truly optimised. But you can't half-optimise under Anonymous Platform - it has to be all or nothing. That's why the installer had to cover all apps. |
Grant (SSSF) Send message Joined: 19 Aug 99 Posts: 13855 Credit: 208,696,464 RAC: 304 |
I just not imagine why somebody uses this new GPU's and choose to run stock apps.As Rob pointed out, in many cases people just don't know about optimised applications. And if you look at many of the systems running stock, they also aren't aware of command line values either- their hardware is running with the default settings that were done so even the lowest end hardware could crunch without impacting on system performance. These days, pretty much everything from the RTX 2060 & the GTX 1660Ti and up could run the SoG application with the most aggressive settings possible, and have little (if any) effect on system responsiveness. The only other thing the user would need to do would be to reserve a CPU core to support the GPU in order to not impact on their CPU processing times. Grant Darwin NT |
wujj123456 Send message Joined: 5 Sep 04 Posts: 40 Credit: 20,877,975 RAC: 219 |
It is quite simple to understand, choose from any one of: As someone in "fit and forget" camp, I just want to contribute free compute time to science, not keep messing with configurations or profiles. I don't care all that much about credits either. I never bothered to look up optimizations until I noticed my WUs are failing consistently last weekend. Then I learnt the optimized apps thanks to all helpful people here to both solve the failure and get a boost in efficiency with same power. I probably spent at most half an hour to set up a new Ubuntu install and those optimized apps on my secondary PC. Linux is both my job and work environment so I have no learning curve. However, I spent another few hours messing with all other apps like Steam, controllers, browsers, etc to ensure I can do what I normally do in Windows on this secondary PC. My initial try was actually a diskless boot as well just so I have no chance of messing up Windows install. I still run Windows exclusively on my main gaming PC since I don't want to bother with managing two installs and frequently reboot between the two OSes. Use it normally is why most people bought their computers I suppose. I probably bought more powerful CPUs than I would otherwise need for BOINC, but that's about it. That's why I think it's very important such optimizations are provided by project by default and stop providing WUs to computers with faulty drivers. I am sure the admins running the projects is constantly weighing between spending more time in optimization and other stuff they do. |
Keith Myers Send message Joined: 29 Apr 01 Posts: 13164 Credit: 1,160,866,277 RAC: 1,873 |
To prevent harmful interaction between an existing Windows OS installation, I alway recommend purchasing a cheap 128GB SSD for $25 and installing Linux onto that. Then just switch between the two OS' by using the BIOS boot choice. That way you can run your normal Windows OS without it ever knowing about the Linux installation and vice versa. Seti@Home classic workunits:20,676 CPU time:74,226 hours A proud member of the OFA (Old Farts Association) |
Wiggo Send message Joined: 24 Jan 00 Posts: 36850 Credit: 261,360,520 RAC: 489 |
To prevent harmful interaction between an existing Windows OS installation, I alway recommend purchasing a cheap 128GB SSD for $25 and installing Linux onto that. Then just switch between the two OS' by using the BIOS boot choice. That way you can run your normal Windows OS without it ever knowing about the Linux installation and vice versa.I used a larger SSD, but yes that is how mine 2 rigs work. Connect SSD, disconnect Windows drive/s, install Linux, reconnect Windows drive/s, go into BIOS and select your preferred boot drive, then use whichever F key (F12 in my case) to boot into the other OS when desired. Cheers. |
wujj123456 Send message Joined: 5 Sep 04 Posts: 40 Credit: 20,877,975 RAC: 219 |
To prevent harmful interaction between an existing Windows OS installation, I alway recommend purchasing a cheap 128GB SSD for $25 and installing Linux onto that. Then just switch between the two OS' by using the BIOS boot choice. That way you can run your normal Windows OS without it ever knowing about the Linux installation and vice versa.I used a larger SSD, but yes that is how mine 2 rigs work. Connect SSD, disconnect Windows drive/s, install Linux, reconnect Windows drive/s, go into BIOS and select your preferred boot drive, then use whichever F key (F12 in my case) to boot into the other OS when desired. Usually I run update-grub when in Linux distro and it will find my Windows installation and add to grub menu. Then I can always boot from Linux and select Windows in menu if needed, without having to press a key at the right time. However, I couldn't get it working with my Windows 10, with either ntldr or chainloader command. None of them can find my Windows boot partition or efi file even though I am fairly confident I passed in the right uuid. I wonder if it has anything to do with bitlocker, but AFAIK it should only encrypt the partitions I specified, not including the boot partition. Has anyone got grub to recognize Windows under UEFI when bitlocker is turned on? Mind sharing the grub menuentry? |
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