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Keith Myers Send message Joined: 29 Apr 01 Posts: 13164 Credit: 1,160,866,277 RAC: 1,873 |
Or just a another couple of months for ASUS to work the bugs out of the BIOS code hopefully. But ASUS is absolutely the last vendor to offer updated BIOS with the latest AGESA code. Seti@Home classic workunits:20,676 CPU time:74,226 hours A proud member of the OFA (Old Farts Association) |
Jord Send message Joined: 9 Jun 99 Posts: 15184 Credit: 4,362,181 RAC: 3 |
Memory considerations for Ryzen 3000 systems as tested by Linus Media Group: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iHJ16hD4ysk |
Keith Myers Send message Joined: 29 Apr 01 Posts: 13164 Credit: 1,160,866,277 RAC: 1,873 |
Memory considerations for Ryzen 3000 systems as tested by Linus Media Group: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iHJ16hD4ysk Good video. Shows that AMD has been able to engineer the maximum performance even out of base Jedec memory speeds. So you don't have to spend the premium bucks on the fastest memory/lowest latency kits that you had to do for best performance on Ryzen Gen. 1 and Ryzen Gen. 2. Seti@Home classic workunits:20,676 CPU time:74,226 hours A proud member of the OFA (Old Farts Association) |
Keith Myers Send message Joined: 29 Apr 01 Posts: 13164 Credit: 1,160,866,277 RAC: 1,873 |
And the leaked benchmarks for the Epyc processors using the new chiplet design are out. How about 64 cores and 128 threads and 256MB of cache? https://www.tomshardware.com/news/amd-epyc-7742-vs-intel-xeon-benchmarks,40089.html Seti@Home classic workunits:20,676 CPU time:74,226 hours A proud member of the OFA (Old Farts Association) |
Ian&Steve C. Send message Joined: 28 Sep 99 Posts: 4267 Credit: 1,282,604,591 RAC: 6,640 |
And the leaked benchmarks for the Epyc processors using the new chiplet design are out. How about 64 cores and 128 threads and 256MB of cache? Sounds like a CPU that SETI wouldnt be able to load 100% because of the CPU WU restrictions :P Seti@Home classic workunits: 29,492 CPU time: 134,419 hours |
Keith Myers Send message Joined: 29 Apr 01 Posts: 13164 Credit: 1,160,866,277 RAC: 1,873 |
Nope you would still be restricted to only 100 cpu tasks running on it at any time. Might be enough reduction to not have the cpu exhibit overcommitment and can use the other 28 threads to feed 20 gpus with 8 threads left over to run the Desktop. Seti@Home classic workunits:20,676 CPU time:74,226 hours A proud member of the OFA (Old Farts Association) |
Tom M Send message Joined: 28 Nov 02 Posts: 5126 Credit: 276,046,078 RAC: 462 |
Nope you would still be restricted to only 100 cpu tasks running on it at any time. Might be enough reduction to not have the cpu exhibit overcommitment and can use the other 28 threads to feed 20 gpus with 8 threads left over to run the Desktop. Is the 100 cpu task a BOINC limit or a Seti limit? If it is a Seti limit you could be running another cpu-based project with no loss of production. Tom A proud member of the OFA (Old Farts Association). |
Keith Myers Send message Joined: 29 Apr 01 Posts: 13164 Credit: 1,160,866,277 RAC: 1,873 |
I believe it is only a Seti limit. But I have no experience with any other projects cpu applications. I wonder if the QC Chemistry app at GPUGrid has any limit. Seti@Home classic workunits:20,676 CPU time:74,226 hours A proud member of the OFA (Old Farts Association) |
jsm Send message Joined: 1 Oct 16 Posts: 124 Credit: 51,135,572 RAC: 298 |
Is it perhaps time for those in charge of SETI development to review all such limits in the light of improved or enhanced capability? Surely these will be constants easily modified. Of particular concern is the limit on downloading background tasks on my 2990 because every time SETI goes off line I run out of work very quickly. Who is actually responsible for making this sort of decision? jsm |
Keith Myers Send message Joined: 29 Apr 01 Posts: 13164 Credit: 1,160,866,277 RAC: 1,873 |
It would have to be a consensus among all the BOINC and Seti developers to increase the task per cpu count. The controls are in the server side software. The lead developer would be David Anderson. Seti@Home classic workunits:20,676 CPU time:74,226 hours A proud member of the OFA (Old Farts Association) |
rob smith Send message Joined: 7 Mar 03 Posts: 22555 Credit: 416,307,556 RAC: 380 |
It is down to the day-to-day project team, which is lead by Eric Korpela. These day DA is taking a back seat from day-to-day life of SETI@Home, spending a chunk of his time working on Nebula and Science United. Bob Smith Member of Seti PIPPS (Pluto is a Planet Protest Society) Somewhere in the (un)known Universe? |
rob smith Send message Joined: 7 Mar 03 Posts: 22555 Credit: 416,307,556 RAC: 380 |
SETI is one of very few projects that use the processor limits. Bob Smith Member of Seti PIPPS (Pluto is a Planet Protest Society) Somewhere in the (un)known Universe? |
Grant (SSSF) Send message Joined: 19 Aug 99 Posts: 13861 Credit: 208,696,464 RAC: 304 |
Is the 100 cpu task a BOINC limit or a Seti limit? It is a Seti@home limit because the Seti@home servers can't cope with the load a larger amount of Results-out-in-the-field produces. Grant Darwin NT |
Keith Myers Send message Joined: 29 Apr 01 Posts: 13164 Credit: 1,160,866,277 RAC: 1,873 |
It is down to the day-to-day project team, which is lead by Eric Korpela. I'm not talking about project management. I am speaking of code development. Eric has done very little in the past. Look at the contributors list at github/boinc. DA is the major code writer. https://github.com/BOINC/boinc/graphs/contributors The server code commits have been predominately by Tristan Olive, Shawn Kwang, Christian Beer, Kevin Reed and Vitali Koshura. Those are the guys you need to petition to increase the cpu task limit. Seti@Home classic workunits:20,676 CPU time:74,226 hours A proud member of the OFA (Old Farts Association) |
Zalster Send message Joined: 27 May 99 Posts: 5517 Credit: 528,817,460 RAC: 242 |
To Keith’s question on GPUGrid. I don’t think there is. I restrict by how many days worth, usually half day with no additional. Since there hasn’t been any for a long time it’s hard to remember. |
jsm Send message Joined: 1 Oct 16 Posts: 124 Credit: 51,135,572 RAC: 298 |
Well whoever is responsible I hope they will consider that to hold back frm change can lead to stagnation. I would be disappointed if TR3 comes out with 64/128, I shell out a considerable sum and then find it cannot run SETI at better than a Ryzen 3 m/c. jsm |
Grant (SSSF) Send message Joined: 19 Aug 99 Posts: 13861 Credit: 208,696,464 RAC: 304 |
AMD Rome Second Generation EPYC Review: 2x 64-core Benchmarked. AMD have finally done it- they didn't just catch up with Intel, they're way out in front (for most workloads). Summary- Sixty-four cores. Each core with an improved Zen 2 core, offering ~15% better IPC performance than Naples (as tested in our consumer CPU review), and doubled AVX2/FP performance. The chip has a total of 256 MB of L3 cache, and 128 PCIe 4.0 lanes. AMD's second generation EPYC, in this case the EPYC 7742, is a behemoth... Grant Darwin NT |
Grant (SSSF) Send message Joined: 19 Aug 99 Posts: 13861 Credit: 208,696,464 RAC: 304 |
Phoronix has also taken a look at the new Epyc Rome CPUs. AMD EPYC 7502 + EPYC 7742 Linux Performance Benchmarks Grant Darwin NT |
ML1 Send message Joined: 25 Nov 01 Posts: 21298 Credit: 7,508,002 RAC: 20 |
Phoronix has also taken a look at the new Epyc Rome CPUs. Tom's Hardware also reports on that from earlier 'leaked' results: AMD EPYC Rome 7742 Battles Intel Xeon in Benchmarks Posted Online An anonymous source has submitted initial benchmarks of AMD's rumored 64-core, 128-thread EPYC 7742 processor to the publicly available OpenBenchmarking database. The posting has since been removed, but we managed to grab the test results... ... The EPYC 7742's alleged dominance continued to be seen in rendering workloads. The 64-core beast purportedly outperformed two Xeon Platinum 8280s... The return of AMD has been a very long time coming... Here's hoping there's no repeat of the 'dirty tricks' to stymie AMD this time round! Happy fast crunchin'! Martin See new freedom: Mageia Linux Take a look for yourself: Linux Format The Future is what We all make IT (GPLv3) |
Bill Send message Joined: 30 Nov 05 Posts: 282 Credit: 6,916,194 RAC: 60 |
This may be obvious, but if you have so many PCIe lanes, memory lanes, and cores, wouldn't a server chock full of GPUs be the better way if you wanted to just purely crunch Seti/Boinc? I'm sure the cost is what prohibits most people from going this route, but I'm wondering if there are other reasons besides this. Seti@home classic: 1,456 results, 1.613 years CPU time |
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