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#1 |
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Jun 2008
128 Posts |
How much faster are the newer versions (1.8.7) of the sieve program than the last known 'stable' one (1.7.15)? Would it be worth it for me to switch to the experimental program once i finish my range, or should I stick with what we know works?
Also, is there any way to help raise up what our last known stable version is closer to the recent experimental versions |
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#2 |
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Jul 2003
wear a mask
22·419 Posts |
Try the latest version on your machine. If the speed increase is significant and you appear to find the expected number of factors over a large range (plus or minus 10%), I would recommend you just use the latest version.
Last fiddled with by masser on 2009-01-29 at 03:43 |
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#3 |
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Mar 2003
New Zealand
13·89 Posts |
From memory I think my C2D 2.66GHz in 64-bit mode does about 575K p/sec with version 1.7.15, and about 670K p/sec with version 1.8.7. (For the 221 k sr5data.txt).
The experimental version is updated every time I try out a new piece of code or add a new feature. The stable version is only updated to fix bugs. It is usually OK to use the latest experimental version, especially if it was posted more than a few days ago and you are running Linux. I am always using the Linux version myself to sieve for one project or another, but I rely on others to notice problems in the Windows version. |
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#4 |
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Jun 2008
A16 Posts |
I am running Windows, but I'm going to take the risk and see what happens.
Currently running 1.8.8, and it is crunching about 50k more p each second than 1.7.15 (its about a 15% gain in speed). I'm working with the 211k data set. Thats a pretty nice gain. |
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