- Jan 14, 2021
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Starting with last year's folding race against Tom's Hardware, my old gaming rig went from just sitting there to Folding@home, and then shortly afterwards also to Rosetta@home (plus recently World Community Grid).
My thoughts about finally upgrading it date way back, even before I first discussed this with @Assimilator1
However, nothing ever materialized, and then the market went entirely crazy, effectively stopping me from even thinking about this, especially from a GPU perspective.
But...
Then I stumbled over a Supermicro DP Xeon motherboard (always loved those...). Its current prices were good. Maybe even very good, given the current market situation. A quick price check on the parts I'd need to get a system like that running didn't look too bad. But what made me finally pull the trigger one week later was finding a store offering the RAM for actually half the regular price and claiming to have it readily available. Unlikely as it seemed, I got all parts within a single week, even those with unknown availability in the respective store.
I spent the better part of the last week to move this system into production (hence the lower than usual output). There were a few hiccups with the Windows scheduler (obviously too many cores...) and FahCore_22 or the 461.92 nVidia driver crashed over night after running for more than a day (I'm back on the 456.71 for the moment).Currently, the working configuration is, after struggling with Process Lasso and the Windows scheduler: ProBalance off, Rosetta processes with fixed CPU affinity (entire CPU 1), WCG processes with fixed CPU affinity (entire CPU 2, excl. two threads), F@H Core 22 processes with fixed CPU affinity (remaining two threads of CPU 2). For the two BOINC projects, their preferences are (# % of processors)=(# dedicated threads)/(total # of threads)*100, so nothing fancy there.
Edit: The system is now on Debian (for DC), on a separate SSD (Thanks @Endgame124 & @Icecold for suggesting it and @StefanR5R for a lot of helpful information).
Brief system overview:
CPU: 2x Intel Xeon E5-2698 v4
Motherboard: Supermicro X10DRi (BIOS modded to add NVMe boot capabilities)
RAM: 8x 16GB Samsung DDR4 2400 RDIMM (ECC)
GPU: Evga GeForce GTX Titan X
Sound: Creative Labs Sound Blaster ZxR
Storage: Supermicro AOC-SLG3-2M2 with 1TB Samsung 970 Evo Plus (Windows) & 250GB Samsung 970 Evo Plus (Debian), 1TB Samsung 940 Evo
PSU: Seasonic Prime TX 1000W
The cooling system was "inherited" from the old gaming rig. The CPUs needed new coolers, obviously, but that's it. Currently, all cores fully loaded, at max. turbo, GPU folding, both CPU report 48-49°C, and the GPU reports 42°C, room temperature is roughly 22°C. Not too bad.

Overall, I'm glad I did this, as I really grew fond of both, DC and the TeAm, and this way, I can contribute a little more
My thoughts about finally upgrading it date way back, even before I first discussed this with @Assimilator1
But...
Then I stumbled over a Supermicro DP Xeon motherboard (always loved those...). Its current prices were good. Maybe even very good, given the current market situation. A quick price check on the parts I'd need to get a system like that running didn't look too bad. But what made me finally pull the trigger one week later was finding a store offering the RAM for actually half the regular price and claiming to have it readily available. Unlikely as it seemed, I got all parts within a single week, even those with unknown availability in the respective store.
I spent the better part of the last week to move this system into production (hence the lower than usual output). There were a few hiccups with the Windows scheduler (obviously too many cores...) and FahCore_22 or the 461.92 nVidia driver crashed over night after running for more than a day (I'm back on the 456.71 for the moment).
Edit: The system is now on Debian (for DC), on a separate SSD (Thanks @Endgame124 & @Icecold for suggesting it and @StefanR5R for a lot of helpful information).
Brief system overview:
CPU: 2x Intel Xeon E5-2698 v4
Motherboard: Supermicro X10DRi (BIOS modded to add NVMe boot capabilities)
RAM: 8x 16GB Samsung DDR4 2400 RDIMM (ECC)
GPU: Evga GeForce GTX Titan X
Sound: Creative Labs Sound Blaster ZxR
Storage: Supermicro AOC-SLG3-2M2 with 1TB Samsung 970 Evo Plus (Windows) & 250GB Samsung 970 Evo Plus (Debian), 1TB Samsung 940 Evo
PSU: Seasonic Prime TX 1000W
The cooling system was "inherited" from the old gaming rig. The CPUs needed new coolers, obviously, but that's it. Currently, all cores fully loaded, at max. turbo, GPU folding, both CPU report 48-49°C, and the GPU reports 42°C, room temperature is roughly 22°C. Not too bad.

Overall, I'm glad I did this, as I really grew fond of both, DC and the TeAm, and this way, I can contribute a little more
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