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#111 |
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Basketry That Evening!
"Bunslow the Bold"
Jun 2011
40<A<43 -89<O<-88
160658 Posts |
I dunno about tables, but I can give a quick overview of each assignment. (For the record, any assignment will put full, 100% load on the cpu, but I'm assuming that's not what you meant.)
Trial factoring varies heavily depending on what bit levels you're doing it at. Low-limit assignments are very, very short, i.e. a few minutes, maybe 15 on an average processor. "Normal" trial factoring again depends on the factoring depth (each bit takes twice as long as the previous one) but typical assignments take from a quarter of a day to one or two days, depending on the assignment and cpu speed. P-1 factoring is another way to find factors, and again, varies with circumstances. A typical assignment will take one or two days, or for a large assignment maybe three. The second stage will also use 500MB - 1GB of memory (RAM) or more if you let it. LL testing is very, very long. Current LL assignments take me a month, and I have Intel's fastest processor. On average they can be anywhere from a month to three or four or more, depending heavily on cpu speed. All these time estimates assume you run P95 24 hours per day. As for why it's not queuing 5 days of work, my guess (only a guess) would be that because each assignment is 15 minutes long, that even 1 day of work is ~100 assignments, and it's not getting more than some preset maximum. Guys, any other ideas? |
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#112 |
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Feb 2011
Bratislava
33 Posts |
Ok, I see, that TF to low limits is the fastest work. Also it seems that different CPUs get different TF limits in normal TF assignments according to that CPU speed.
LL testing, double checking and P-1 testing is very slow. What about ECM of small Mersenne numbers and Fermat numbers? About that queuing 5 DOW, it seems that the number of assignments per CPU is limited to 15. |
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#113 | |
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Banned
"Luigi"
Aug 2002
Team Italia
486510 Posts |
Quote:
ECM on Fermat numbers is between LL-D and LL. Luigi |
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#114 |
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Jun 2003
116910 Posts |
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#115 |
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Feb 2011
Bratislava
33 Posts |
^^ Thank you very much, gyus
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#116 | |
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Jun 2003
7·167 Posts |
Quote:
Trial factorisation is the least needed worktype, as far as CPUs are concern. GPUs leave CPUs in the dust, and have basically made them obsolete at this task. Last fiddled with by Mr. P-1 on 2011-10-26 at 08:59 |
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#117 |
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Feb 2011
Bratislava
2710 Posts |
Okay, I will consider running P-1 factoring.
You said, that GPUs can run Prime95 too or what? It means, I may run Prime95 at my graphics card? :) |
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#118 | |
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Jun 2003
100100100012 Posts |
Quote:
Check out the GPU computing forum for more information. |
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#119 |
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Feb 2011
Bratislava
33 Posts |
I set the memory usage to 300 MB and work type to P-1 factoring. First CPU core assigned P-1 testing, second core ECM testing. I tried to increase memory to 600 MB, but the same result, and all the memory was used to first core P-1 and that work was restarted.
Is it possible to run P-1 on both CPU cores? |
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#120 | |
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"Kieren"
Jul 2011
In My Own Galaxy!
2·3·1,693 Posts |
Quote:
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#121 |
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Feb 2011
Bratislava
33 Posts |
Yes, but the problem is, that I have set the options for All workers to P-1 factoring and Run on any CPU.
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