- Oct 23, 2000
- 9,200
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We are entering the hot season for the northern hemisphere, so I thought it might be interesting to compile a list of the projects that create the most at least amount of heat.
I have only tested a handful so far, but here are my beginning contributions to the list. These were all tested with a Ryzen 9 3900X (Scythe Fuma 2 cooler) and a GTX 1060 3GB, with the CPU and GPU running at 100% utilization and ambient temperature around 70-75F (21-24C). Most are done in Windows, with the few that don't have Windows apps (like Gaia@home) in a Linux VM on the same machine. GPU projects were all run with 1 task at a time, CPU projects with 22 tasks at a time leaving 2 threads free for the GPU.
The GPU tasks were tested with vdwnumbers running on the CPU since I know it's a low heat producer, and the CPU tasks were tested with Einstein running on the GPU since it is also a low heat producer, to help prevent inaccurate measurements due to extra heat from the other components.
The temperatures are an average over at least an hour of runtime. I have both the CPU and GPU configured to throttle themselves at 85C currently, just to try to avoid too much heat in the house, so anything marked 85C would probably go even higher if I let it.
This is just a starting list so I'll add more when I'm in the mood to test more and have additional numbers.
If you have any numbers to add, or any projects you want me to test with my "baseline" system for comparison, feel free to add your input to the thread. Temperatures for the same projects but on different platforms (Intel CPU and AMD GPU for example) would also be interesting.
GPU:
Amicable Numbers - 70C
Collatz - 76C
Einstein@Home - 62C
MilkyWay@Home - 82C
Minecraft@Home - 66C
MLC@Home - 53C
Moo! Wrapper - 70C
PrimeGrid (AP27) - 82C
PrimeGrid (GFN 17 Low) - 69C
PrimeGrid (PPS Sieve)- 78C
Private GFN Server - 82C
SRBase - 75C
CPU:
BEEF@Home - 85C (capped)
Gaia@home - 72C
iThena.Computations (CPU intensive) - 66C
latinsquares (ODLK1) - 72C
MilkyWay@Home - 70C
Minecraft@Home - 73C
NanoHub (with only 12 tasks running due to RAM requirements) - 83C
ODLK - 75C
PrimeGrid (GFN 17 Low) - 70C
Rosetta@home - 76C
SiDock@Home - 76C
The Ramanujan Machine - 65C
Universe@Home - 69C
vdwnumbers.org - 63C
Yoyo@home - 74C (running a random mix of all applications)
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As I mentioned in Post #15 I am going to add info about which projects are PCIe bandwidth limited in slower PCIe slots since I have a quad GPU system (4x Quadro K2200) that IS limited in two of the slots.
For this list, I'll note whether there appears to be any limiting at all, and list average run times to show how much of an effect the slower slots have on the tasks. Cards 1 and 2 are full PCIe 16x 3.0 speed, card 3 is 8x 3.0, and card 4 is 4x 2.0.
Amicable Numbers - Not limited. But it does need 8GB of RAM for each GPU, in addition to RAM for the OS and anything else that is running on the computer.
Collatz - Slightly limited. I'm not 100% sure since Collatz tasks don't include the GPU device number in the results/logs like other projects do, so I'm basing this only on watching the run times in the BOINC client instead of using averages over several days. Cards 1, 2, and 3 all have virtually identically processing times, averaging around 1.25 hours per task. Card 4 is a bit slower, averaging around 1.5 hours per task. So possibly a small amount of bandwidth limiting on the PCIe 4x 2.0 slot.
Einstein@Home (Gamma Ray Pulsar) - Not limited.
MilkyWay@Home - Not limited.
Minecraft@home (Trailer Thumbnail 2 app) - Limited. Cards 1&2: 3.2 hours. Card 3: 3.5 hours. Card 4: 4.2 hours. Not as much of a spread as with MLC@Home, but still a noticeable difference on the slower PCIe slots.
MLC@Home - Definitely limited. Cards 1&2: 1.6 hours. Card 3: 2.1 hours. Card 4: 3.5 hours.
-----MLC@Home with a CPU project running on 50% of the CPU cores - All four cards average about 3.7 hours per task. So not only is the project limited by slow PCIe slots, but additionally limited by having anything else running on the CPU at the same time.
Moo! Wrapper - Not limited.
PrimeGrid - AP27, not limited.
Private GFN Server - Not limited.
I have only tested a handful so far, but here are my beginning contributions to the list. These were all tested with a Ryzen 9 3900X (Scythe Fuma 2 cooler) and a GTX 1060 3GB, with the CPU and GPU running at 100% utilization and ambient temperature around 70-75F (21-24C). Most are done in Windows, with the few that don't have Windows apps (like Gaia@home) in a Linux VM on the same machine. GPU projects were all run with 1 task at a time, CPU projects with 22 tasks at a time leaving 2 threads free for the GPU.
The GPU tasks were tested with vdwnumbers running on the CPU since I know it's a low heat producer, and the CPU tasks were tested with Einstein running on the GPU since it is also a low heat producer, to help prevent inaccurate measurements due to extra heat from the other components.
The temperatures are an average over at least an hour of runtime. I have both the CPU and GPU configured to throttle themselves at 85C currently, just to try to avoid too much heat in the house, so anything marked 85C would probably go even higher if I let it.
This is just a starting list so I'll add more when I'm in the mood to test more and have additional numbers.
If you have any numbers to add, or any projects you want me to test with my "baseline" system for comparison, feel free to add your input to the thread. Temperatures for the same projects but on different platforms (Intel CPU and AMD GPU for example) would also be interesting.
GPU:
Amicable Numbers - 70C
Collatz - 76C
Einstein@Home - 62C
MilkyWay@Home - 82C
Minecraft@Home - 66C
MLC@Home - 53C
Moo! Wrapper - 70C
PrimeGrid (AP27) - 82C
PrimeGrid (GFN 17 Low) - 69C
PrimeGrid (PPS Sieve)- 78C
Private GFN Server - 82C
SRBase - 75C
CPU:
BEEF@Home - 85C (capped)
Gaia@home - 72C
iThena.Computations (CPU intensive) - 66C
latinsquares (ODLK1) - 72C
MilkyWay@Home - 70C
Minecraft@Home - 73C
NanoHub (with only 12 tasks running due to RAM requirements) - 83C
ODLK - 75C
PrimeGrid (GFN 17 Low) - 70C
Rosetta@home - 76C
SiDock@Home - 76C
The Ramanujan Machine - 65C
Universe@Home - 69C
vdwnumbers.org - 63C
Yoyo@home - 74C (running a random mix of all applications)
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
As I mentioned in Post #15 I am going to add info about which projects are PCIe bandwidth limited in slower PCIe slots since I have a quad GPU system (4x Quadro K2200) that IS limited in two of the slots.
For this list, I'll note whether there appears to be any limiting at all, and list average run times to show how much of an effect the slower slots have on the tasks. Cards 1 and 2 are full PCIe 16x 3.0 speed, card 3 is 8x 3.0, and card 4 is 4x 2.0.
Amicable Numbers - Not limited. But it does need 8GB of RAM for each GPU, in addition to RAM for the OS and anything else that is running on the computer.
Collatz - Slightly limited. I'm not 100% sure since Collatz tasks don't include the GPU device number in the results/logs like other projects do, so I'm basing this only on watching the run times in the BOINC client instead of using averages over several days. Cards 1, 2, and 3 all have virtually identically processing times, averaging around 1.25 hours per task. Card 4 is a bit slower, averaging around 1.5 hours per task. So possibly a small amount of bandwidth limiting on the PCIe 4x 2.0 slot.
Einstein@Home (Gamma Ray Pulsar) - Not limited.
MilkyWay@Home - Not limited.
Minecraft@home (Trailer Thumbnail 2 app) - Limited. Cards 1&2: 3.2 hours. Card 3: 3.5 hours. Card 4: 4.2 hours. Not as much of a spread as with MLC@Home, but still a noticeable difference on the slower PCIe slots.
MLC@Home - Definitely limited. Cards 1&2: 1.6 hours. Card 3: 2.1 hours. Card 4: 3.5 hours.
-----MLC@Home with a CPU project running on 50% of the CPU cores - All four cards average about 3.7 hours per task. So not only is the project limited by slow PCIe slots, but additionally limited by having anything else running on the CPU at the same time.
Moo! Wrapper - Not limited.
PrimeGrid - AP27, not limited.
Private GFN Server - Not limited.
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