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#23 | |
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"Mihai Preda"
Apr 2015
26548 Posts |
Quote:
if LL wavefront is at N, and let's say the LL-double-check is at N/2, that would imply that 25% of total LL compute is used for double checks. The gain from PRP would be these 25% being replaced by some small percent only. |
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#24 | |
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Undefined
"The unspeakable one"
Jun 2006
My evil lair
6,793 Posts |
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#25 | ||
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"Mihai Preda"
Apr 2015
22·3·112 Posts |
Quote:
Quote:
But my point was that the potential gain is 25%, not 4% (minus the PRP double check policy). In the worst case, I would see the PRP-double-check as being: complete double check up to N/4 (vs. N/2 for LL now), and that'd be 25% (1/4) being replaced by 6% (1/16) "check tax". |
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#26 |
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Undefined
"The unspeakable one"
Jun 2006
My evil lair
11010100010012 Posts |
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#27 | |
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"Mihai Preda"
Apr 2015
22×3×112 Posts |
Quote:
Now, if you plug in some error rate of the existing results in the above formula, that would produce the "optimally efficient" rate of double-check. LL and PRP having different error rates, they'd require different rates of double-check. We could say that a secondary goal is being able to say "there's no mersenne prime up to this value", and this would also play into the double check rate. Also, maybe people come up with ideas about how to do "smart" double-check for PRP, which would validate mostly against malicious user action, not for correct computation. |
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#28 |
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Sep 2003
2·5·7·37 Posts |
I think the answer is straightforward:
1. Double checking will continue to exist, even after all old LL tests have been verified. 2. There will be multiple statuses reflecting increasing degrees of certainty: never tested; unverified; unverified but reliable; verified; factored. Just like today, except with that one additional status. 2. The project administrators will continue to decide "what makes the most sense" and might adjust the default ratio of double checks to first time tests. It might go from one in ten to, say, one in a hundred. 3. The "one double check a year" default might be turned off by default instead. 4. Each individual user will have the option of specializing in double checks, but considerably fewer will choose to do so. "Strategic" double checking will probably go extinct. 5. The backlog of double checks will increase from the current ten years behind first-time tests to twenty years or more. 6. Moore's Law will ensure that at least some double checking will be done no matter what. For example, LL testing all exponents up to one million was a milestone twenty years ago when the project was first starting, but now a single user with sufficient resources can do this over the course of a weekend. 7. LL tests will still be needed to prove a Mersenne prime, since strictly speaking, PRP tests can only prove that a Mersenne number is composite. 8. We will receive a transmission from extraterrestrials with a complete list of the first hundred Mersenne primes. Primenet disbands because we only managed to discover sixty of them ourselves so far and there's no point continuing. There will be a scandal because we should have discovered sixty-one, and the Russians were responsible. |
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#29 | |
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Undefined
"The unspeakable one"
Jun 2006
My evil lair
11010100010012 Posts |
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#30 |
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"Mihai Preda"
Apr 2015
22·3·112 Posts |
If a new mersenne prime is found by PRP followed by LL verification, who is credited with finding the prime? I think an official statement on that is needed.
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#31 |
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P90 years forever!
Aug 2002
Yeehaw, FL
17·487 Posts |
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#32 |
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"Jacob"
Sep 2006
Brussels, Belgium
2×977 Posts |
It seems that some lines are output to the worker window a second time with a different time stamp.
At the same time there is a communication with the server, only the expected completion date of the current workunit is sent to the server (according to prime.log) and the number of completed iterations of the previous worker screen output is written to result.txt. This happens every 160 minutes and 210000 iterations approximatively. I checked : the program is not repeating the iterations, meaning the iteration count of the lines on the screen and results.txt is wrong. This behaviour is observed with prime95 and mprime 29.4.3. Jacob |
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#33 | |
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Nov 2008
509 Posts |
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You can argue all you like but no matter how much you say ah yes, well, PRP is 99.9999% (or whatever number you care to plug in) it's a prime, you don't KNOW that for a fact....the chance if it being wrong are not zero. |
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