(and why aren't you racing?
)
Currently there is a race on for the DC project PrimeGrid. The Work Units (WUs) are huge and take tens of hours to complete. Local thread here: http://forums.anandtech.com/showthread.php?t=2243779
Points are a representation of the difficulty of the WU, so a WU with the ~same difficulty will score the same. This means while no two WUs are identical, it is possible to compare them via dividing the time it took to complete by the score to get the time it takes in seconds to score a point. Points per second would be more intuitive, but the values so low as to meaningless.
Some data that might interest you:
2600k, 3.8, AVX, w/HT: 57.2
2500k, 3.4, AVX: 48.0
i3-2100, 3.1, no AVX, no HT: 117.55
1045t, 3.04: 74.9
960t, 6C, 3.2: 64.8
8120, 3.65 (No AVX support from PrimeGrid): 58.2
Now, dividing that into the number of seconds the challenge ran, 432,000 (5*24*60*60) and you can see how many points a core will score over that period:
The HT tax on the 2600k is apparent vs the 2500k. You can see how the i3 struggles, deprived of AVX and HT (now, this may not be good data - I've tweaked the VM config but it takes hours/days to see how that effects WU completion time right now) while we see the Thuban cores doing fine. BD is actually holding its own here... clock for clock it is roughly equal to the Thubans when the FPU is being pounded on. Imagine if it had eight!
The real story is how many cores each CPU "has" - whether they are pure "cores" with full ALU/FPU, etc. or shared via CMT or HT:
Obviously, the HT tax is worth it with so much more work being done over the period of time. BD shows that given 40% or so more power vs the 2600k, it can stay in the game.
I am really looking for some Nehalem/Westmere/Lynnfield numbers, I'd take them from random racers but Prime Grid doesn't report actual clock speed
I need more AVX vs non-AVX data on the Intel side, the i3 numbers look off.
Thanks to Uppsala for donating his FX data. May his 960t rig RIP!
Finally, if you think your OC is stable on your SB, SB-E or IVB, I invite you to participate in the rest of his race. TeAm Anandtech has one rig that has died in a fire, maybe yours will do better! Intstructions in the linked thread above.
Comments/trashing of my data/conclusions welcome. Not an ace graph maker
If there is enough interest, I'd attempt to normalize for each CPU by 100Mhz or similar to give an idea how things stack up clock for clock. Sorry, I am not gathering power data as much as I would like to. The 2600k has the kill-a-watt and is reading 140W under this load. I estimate the Thubans @ ~200-220W based on previous experience.
Currently there is a race on for the DC project PrimeGrid. The Work Units (WUs) are huge and take tens of hours to complete. Local thread here: http://forums.anandtech.com/showthread.php?t=2243779
Points are a representation of the difficulty of the WU, so a WU with the ~same difficulty will score the same. This means while no two WUs are identical, it is possible to compare them via dividing the time it took to complete by the score to get the time it takes in seconds to score a point. Points per second would be more intuitive, but the values so low as to meaningless.
Some data that might interest you:
2600k, 3.8, AVX, w/HT: 57.2
2500k, 3.4, AVX: 48.0
i3-2100, 3.1, no AVX, no HT: 117.55
1045t, 3.04: 74.9
960t, 6C, 3.2: 64.8
8120, 3.65 (No AVX support from PrimeGrid): 58.2
Now, dividing that into the number of seconds the challenge ran, 432,000 (5*24*60*60) and you can see how many points a core will score over that period:
The HT tax on the 2600k is apparent vs the 2500k. You can see how the i3 struggles, deprived of AVX and HT (now, this may not be good data - I've tweaked the VM config but it takes hours/days to see how that effects WU completion time right now) while we see the Thuban cores doing fine. BD is actually holding its own here... clock for clock it is roughly equal to the Thubans when the FPU is being pounded on. Imagine if it had eight!
The real story is how many cores each CPU "has" - whether they are pure "cores" with full ALU/FPU, etc. or shared via CMT or HT:
Obviously, the HT tax is worth it with so much more work being done over the period of time. BD shows that given 40% or so more power vs the 2600k, it can stay in the game.
I am really looking for some Nehalem/Westmere/Lynnfield numbers, I'd take them from random racers but Prime Grid doesn't report actual clock speed
I need more AVX vs non-AVX data on the Intel side, the i3 numbers look off.
Thanks to Uppsala for donating his FX data. May his 960t rig RIP!
Finally, if you think your OC is stable on your SB, SB-E or IVB, I invite you to participate in the rest of his race. TeAm Anandtech has one rig that has died in a fire, maybe yours will do better! Intstructions in the linked thread above.
Comments/trashing of my data/conclusions welcome. Not an ace graph maker
If there is enough interest, I'd attempt to normalize for each CPU by 100Mhz or similar to give an idea how things stack up clock for clock. Sorry, I am not gathering power data as much as I would like to. The 2600k has the kill-a-watt and is reading 140W under this load. I estimate the Thubans @ ~200-220W based on previous experience.
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