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Primo reservation thread
This thread is made following the suggestion of Paul Underwood in [URL="https://www.mersenneforum.org/showpost.php?p=519485&postcount=100"]this post[/URL], as a place of reserving large PRPs for ECPP testing.
I'll give a first call: I reserve Phi(32481,10) at 21600 digits. |
From [url]https://www.mersenneforum.org/showpost.php?p=520442&postcount=310[/url]
I am reserving W35851 Done! [url]http://www.factordb.com/index.php?query=%282%5E35851%2B1%29%2F3%2F1184732147%2F1383891629171890065880777%2F54919454473787[/url] Now doing: [url]http://factordb.com/index.php?id=1100000001336232261[/url] (23,451 digits) Done! |
[url]https://www.mersenne.ca/exponent/78737[/url] PRP23654
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Can someone reserve (51^4229-1)/50, (91^4421-1)/90 and 60^4663-59^4663?
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[QUOTE=paulunderwood;536669][url]https://www.mersenne.ca/exponent/78737[/url] PRP23654[/QUOTE]
I am unreserving this number after a major catastrophic hardware failure -- the machine no longer posts. It would be interesting to me for someone with a AMD 3990X to download the certificate for my recent 40k Primo proof from ellipsa.eu and run a verification on it. It took 15.5 hours on my now defunct Opteron class 48 cores at 2.2 GHz. A comparison would be very interesting. |
[QUOTE=sweety439;537759]Can someone reserve (51^4229-1)/50, (91^4421-1)/90 and 60^4663-59^4663?[/QUOTE]
Already finished the first one, should be verified on FactorDB soonish! The other two are spun up on my system and should finish in a day or two. Hope this isn't crass to start work pre-reservation! |
(51^4229-1)/50, (91^4421-1)/90 and 60^4663-59^4663 are all done! FactorDB finished with them and now they are recognized as prime.
[URL="http://factordb.com/index.php?id=1100000000651917018"]http://factordb.com/index.php?id=1100000000651917018[/URL] [URL="http://factordb.com/index.php?id=1100000000685787852"]http://factordb.com/index.php?id=1100000000685787852[/URL] [URL="http://factordb.com/index.php?id=1100000000467236538"]http://factordb.com/index.php?id=1100000000467236538[/URL] After finishing that and presumably finishing my vanity prime test in a couple days, I'd like to reserve P = 3^45535+2 (PRP21726). |
[QUOTE=Gelly;546843]
After finishing that and presumably finishing my vanity prime test in a couple days, I'd like to reserve P = 3^45535+2 (PRP21726).[/QUOTE] Are you using a 32 core system? |
[QUOTE=paulunderwood;546844]Are you using a 32 core system?[/QUOTE]
Yup! 3970x system, for everyone else on the forums who may be curious. I finished 3^45535+2 in about 23 days, though there was a power outage, so precise numbers were lost, unfortunately. The certificate, once verified, will be [URL="http://factordb.com/index.php?id=1100000000213105555"]attached here![/URL] I'll reserve 10^25333-2*10^5182-3 (PRP25333) because it looks silly and it'll force myself into 9th on ECPP. Also... [QUOTE=paulunderwood;538357]It would be interesting to me for someone with a AMD 3990X to download the certificate for my recent 40k Primo proof from ellipsa.eu and run a verification on it. It took 15.5 hours on my now defunct Opteron class 48 cores at 2.2 GHz. A comparison would be very interesting.[/QUOTE] Running it with 3970x, it verified it in 37593s, or a touch less than 10.5 hours. I look forward to seeing results for a 3990x. |
Congrats, Gelly, for the certification of 3^45535+2.
You might want to certify some t[URL="https://primes.utm.edu/top20/page.php?id=49"]op20 Mersnne co-factors[/URL]. The available ones are [URL="https://www.mersenne.ca/prp.php"]here[/URL]. If you are interested, I might have a backup of a partially done [URL="https://www.mersenne.ca/exponent/78737"]M78,737 [/URL] Edit: I can't find a backup. |
[QUOTE=paulunderwood;548863]Congrats, Gelly, for the certification of 3^45535+2.
You might want to certify some t[URL="https://primes.utm.edu/top20/page.php?id=49"]op20 Mersnne co-factors[/URL]. The available ones are [URL="https://www.mersenne.ca/prp.php"]here[/URL]. If you are interested, I might have a backup of a partially done [URL="https://www.mersenne.ca/exponent/78737"]M78,737 [/URL] Edit: I can't find a backup.[/QUOTE] I decided to fire up certification of M78737 with Primo, using 64 processes. Hopefully no one else is already running this! The machine it's running on is a 3Ghz, 36-core/72-thread system. Anyone have a rough sense of how long this should take? (Addendum: it would be great if Primo was open-source... I'd love to understand more about these "stk4321" processes it spawns. If I could farm these out to a cluster and then feed the results back in, presumably this could go a lot faster). |
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