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#155 | |
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May 2007
Kansas; USA
1040310 Posts |
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I'm thinking to get it to 1.5T would take about 10 CPU days but just getting it to about P=1.2T-1.25T would be helpful. I need to remove k's found prime by the drive in the last few days but I could send them to you within about 6 hours or so. (4 AM GMT) Let me know and I'll give you more specifics about what is needed. Gary |
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#156 | |
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"Jason Goatcher"
Mar 2005
350710 Posts |
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#157 | |
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May 2007
Kansas; USA
101·103 Posts |
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Are you familiar with how to run sr2sieve? If not, I should mention that it doesn't remove candidates, it only writes out factors. I'm fine if you want to run the sieve and send me the factors. I can then remove the candidates using srfile. Gary |
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#158 |
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Sep 2004
UVic
7010 Posts |
13438*2^395260+1 is prime! Time: 232.374 sec.
aka 13438*16^98815+1 results file attached. (file completed) Gary can you send a pm with directions how to submit properly? I do believe it's large enough and I've never done it before... ![]() reserving: sieve-sierp-base28.txt Last fiddled with by tcadigan on 2008-01-17 at 05:59 |
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#159 | |
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May 2007
Kansas; USA
101000101000112 Posts |
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Wow, lightning strikes twice in two days! Congrats on your first top-5K prime! And just in time before the file ran out. It saves me sieving time for n=100K-200K also. (I'm including all k's remaining in it; not just the 'team drive' k's.) Life is good! ![]() I'm thinking it makes sense to publically post the instructions on submitting a top-5K prime. I'll do that in the 'report primes here' thread in a little while. Edit: This one will be a little 'different' so to speak. You can choose to submit it as is but the top-5K site will 'normalize' it to 6719*2^395261+1. I would suggest submitting it in this normallized format. I prefer to do it that way because otherwise you get a cryptic message that is not an error but is hard to understand if you've never done it before. I'll send you a PM in addition to the public instructions. Gary Last fiddled with by gd_barnes on 2008-01-18 at 01:57 Reason: Changed comment about where instructions thread is |
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#160 | |
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Jan 2005
479 Posts |
No, I did not add it back (haven't even seen it coming up :>)
I'll add it to my files, and sieve/llr it as far as the rest Quote:
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#161 |
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Sep 2006
11×17 Posts |
Sierp b17: LLR around n~90k for all three k. I reserved till 100,000, but I think I will continue. Will start sieving soon, but have a question again.
What's more effective: - Sieve all three k together, or alone? Alone, I can use sr1sieve, which is much faster.. - Sieve n = 100,000 - 200,000, or should I already sieve a bigger range (for example 100,000 - 1,000,000)? Sierp b18: LLR around n~150k, still one k remaining, and still no prime :( Last fiddled with by Xentar on 2008-01-17 at 19:35 |
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#162 |
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Jan 2006
Hungary
22×67 Posts |
342*27^36291+1 is prime.
found PRP by LLR, proven with pfgw. I won't continue that range obviously. Has anyone ever found a PRP that turned out not to be prime after all? Willem. |
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#163 |
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Jan 2005
479 Posts |
Usually, taking a bigger range doesn't affect the speed too much.
Then again, whenever you find a prime, the extra time is 'wasted'. I'd say that after n=0-100k, a good choice would be n=100-500k. Best would be to test-sieve a few ranges and see how it affects the speed |
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#164 | |
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May 2007
Kansas; USA
1040310 Posts |
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I know I haven't found a PRP to be not prime. Edit: I think there is some smaller ones listed on the top-5000 site. Supposedly the larger the PRP, the less chance it has of being not prime. I heard someone say that there's a much better chance of a hardware error causing an incorrect prime than a PRP being found not prime. Gary Last fiddled with by gd_barnes on 2008-01-17 at 22:46 |
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#165 | |
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May 2007
Kansas; USA
101·103 Posts |
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Agreed on the range to sieve. The speed varies by the square root of the n-range so n=100K-500K should sieve about 50% slower [1-1/sqrt(100K/400K)] than n=100K-200K. If you don't want that kind of slowdown, you could do n=100K-300K, which should sieve about 29% slower [1-1/sqrt(100K/200K)]. The main thing here is that on these low-weight k's, the chance of finding a prime in any n=2X range, i.e. n=100K-200K, is well under 50% so the bigger range is better. Clearly you'll want to break off pieces of the range and LLR them as you go while continuing to sieve the higher ranges. About how to sieve: For 2 k's, you would generally use 2 instances of sr1sieve. But for 3 to ~50-100 k's, use sr2sieve on all of them. >~50-100 k's use srsieve for all sieving. There may be exception situations on 2 or 3 k's since that's kind of the dividing line on what to use. But sr1sieve running 1 k would have to be 3X as fast as sr2sieve running 3 k's, which seems unlikely in most situations. You might test it out to be sure and post back here what you find out. Gary |
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