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#12 | ||
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P90 years forever!
Aug 2002
Yeehaw, FL
2×53×71 Posts |
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#13 | |||||
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"Richard B. Woods"
Aug 2002
Wisconsin USA
170148 Posts |
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Prime95 already allocates only the minimum amount needed when it's doing trial factoring, P-1 stage 1, or L-L testing. The only functions for which it uses the memory settings specified by the user are P-1 stage 2, ECM stage 2, and maybe (I don't recall for sure) ECM stage 1, none of which are required in order for any user to satisfy a PrimeNet assignment. Quote:
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Furthermore, Prime95 and PrimeNet _already have provisions_ to restrict First-time and DC assignments to systems most likely to be able to handle them. The default mode is to automatically request most-suitable assignments. Unless the user _specifically_ requests a first time assignment, first time L-L are assigned only to systems above a certain speed rating, which George raises once in a while. Similarly, there is a lower threshold below which only trial factoring is assigned unless the user _specifically_ requests DC or first-time. Quote:
386s getting LL assignments simply is not a significant problem. It just doesn't happen often enough to make any noticeable difference. When it does happen (which can only be because the 386 user specifically overrode the default setting and requested L-L, or because the 386 user claimed his CPU was a faster model), the PrimeNet assignment system already takes care of it with its timeout procedure. Quote:
Yes, but this feature (skipping stage 2 if not enough memory is available) is already in Prime95 and does not have to be added. |
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#14 | |
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Aug 2002
London, UK
10110112 Posts |
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#15 | ||
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Jun 2003
7×167 Posts |
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#16 |
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Jun 2003
3·7 Posts |
what/ where is the torture test?
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#17 |
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"Patrik Johansson"
Aug 2002
Uppsala, Sweden
52·17 Posts |
It is under Options->Torture Test. You would have to stop the exponent you are working on first, if you want to start it manually. If you start it manually it goes on indefinitely until you stop it or an error is found.
The torture test runs a number of iterations of predefined exponents and then compares the result with the known result. If the result doesn't match the known one, there must be some problems with the computer. See the files readme.txt and stress.txt. (stress.txt deals only with these matters.) |
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#18 | |||
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Aug 2002
2×101 Posts |
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Who knows, it might just return a good result every now and then, and it will be keeping the user's CPU nice and warm. |
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#19 | |
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Aug 2002
North San Diego County
68510 Posts |
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#20 | ||
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Aug 2002
2×101 Posts |
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#21 | |||
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Jun 2003
116910 Posts |
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But if errors ore really such a concern then the solution is not to report negative results, only factors found. Alternatively the program could factor past the current maxumum, thereby searching for factors which would not otherwise be picked up. Regards Daran |
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