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I think it's only folding they're actively trying to run multiple clients of in this thread.
If not, I see no reason to keep running genome if 5 copies on a P3-500 does all in 12-16 hours.
BTW, can some of you with nearly double production post your result compared to seti@home with one/two instances of genome running?
[This message has been edited by Rattledagger (edited 22 March 2001).]
I tried to run a second client on my machine with a PIII@733, Win2K, 256MB. The 1st client slowed down and the second was very slow to filter. Several hours later it had only counted to 58 out of 70something. As soon as I stoped the 1st client the second one finished counting quickly. So no double production for me.
Bye-Bye Guyver. Just as I was getting close. I guess no 3Way dance. Even looks like rocketmanx, is starting to catch up again. So my grand plan of joining the dance and turning one machine back to S@H won't be happening.
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Mark F. (A+ & Network+)
--------------------------------------------------
OH NO, my retractable cup holder swallowed a DVD...
and burped out a movie
Mark F. (A+, Network+, & CCNA)
--------------------------------------------------
OH NO, my retractable cup holder swallowed a DVD...
and burped out a movie
As listed above, except that I decided to run 2 sessions on the 1Ghz system as well.
That's it....
I figured I'd slowly start to pull away, not that 35 degree angle offshoot according to the graphic...
Bring on the extra machines dude, it's all for a good cause...
(Note: Now I have to actually pay for the extra goodies I put into place this last week... )
For however short it lasts, it kind of feels good to be first at something... (Tried for close to 2 years with SETI)
MarkF - Have you tried tweaking your cache settings for the processor? I run my 866 and 1Ghz with a cache timing of 4. The dual 933 and 850 have no extra tweak settings available...
Narcissus - How many systems do you and your friends have running now?
Guyver
Gaming Rig.
- Gigabyte GA-7N400-Pro
- AMD Athlon 3200+ XP
- 1.5GB Dual Channel DDR 433Mhz SDRAM
- 6.1 Digital Audio
- Gigabit Lan (Linksys 1032)
- 4 x 120GB SATA Drives, RAID 0+1 (Striped/Mirrored)
- Sony DRU-500A DVD/+/-/R/RW
- Creative 8x DVD-ROM
- LS120 IDE Floppy
- Zip 100 IDE
- PNY Ultra 5900 (256MB)
- NEC FE950
- DTT2500 Cambridge Soundworks
<font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica" size="2">Originally posted by Guyver: Have you tried tweaking your cache settings for the processor? I run my 866 and 1Ghz with a cache timing of 4. </font>
If you mean the L2 cache lataency, it's at 0.
The prossessor involved is a PIII-550@733 on a BX MoBo, memory is running 2-2-2. Both clients had there priority set to normal. Anything else you might need to know?
If this system could double it's out put, I will try it on others to help our cause!!
Mark F.
Mark F. (A+, Network+, & CCNA)
--------------------------------------------------
OH NO, my retractable cup holder swallowed a DVD...
and burped out a movie
Mark, try setting the priority to HIGH in Win2k. If you don't use your PC at that time for much else, like playing a heavy 3D game, your time should go up.
Also, take care you still have a good amount of swapfile around. Genome takes a pretty bit of swap file.
In Win9x/ME you have to set the CPU idle time to LOW, for at least One of the sessions you're running, if you want to do something with your PC
You may be hurting yourself, by setting the L2 cache latency to 0 (I seem to have lost performance, when I set mine below 4) - ie - missed reads, re-reads.
You may want to play with the numbers, and see what shows optimal output...
Also, I wouldn't go higher than normal for Win2K priority. By going higher, you may cause system level processes (network/disk reads/writes) to suffer, again causing lower performance.
With my 3 sessions running on my 2k box, I leave them on the lowest setting, and they still get 33% each (Avg).
You may want to actually take them back to the lowest setting, instead of normal, and see what shakes loose. As long as nothing else is running, they'll get 99-100% of the processor anyway.
I also went through my services list, and shutdown any services not necessary for my installation.
( Not trying to disagree with you Jorden, I'm just running from my own experiences... If I'm wrong, my bad... )
Guyver
[This message has been edited by Guyver (edited 23 March 2001).]
Gaming Rig.
- Gigabyte GA-7N400-Pro
- AMD Athlon 3200+ XP
- 1.5GB Dual Channel DDR 433Mhz SDRAM
- 6.1 Digital Audio
- Gigabit Lan (Linksys 1032)
- 4 x 120GB SATA Drives, RAID 0+1 (Striped/Mirrored)
- Sony DRU-500A DVD/+/-/R/RW
- Creative 8x DVD-ROM
- LS120 IDE Floppy
- Zip 100 IDE
- PNY Ultra 5900 (256MB)
- NEC FE950
- DTT2500 Cambridge Soundworks
I dunno, I don't check on it. I just let it run. But I think the P133 takes about a week for 99 aa-length data block. The P166 probably takes 6 days for the same.
Jorden, if you set genome to HIGH on NT, you can't run any games the normal way.
I've seen some recommend changing the priority of games to HIGH, but if they stops responding it's nearly impossible to kill them. The only worse thing you can do is to set a process to REALTIME.
Guru, is it very cold in Finland, or is you using some special cooling on the Katmai 500535
As for run-time, it's just to re-format my equation to this:
[seti@home cpu-time * 0,3 * aa-length] / times-faster = run-time g@h
and you can calculate yourself.
Since no-one has posted any numbers, you can use 13,38 as times-faster.
[This message has been edited by Rattledagger (edited 24 March 2001).]
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