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Les Bayliss
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Message 61727 - Posted: 19 Dec 2019, 6:22:16 UTC

My turn:

And they're all gone.

:)
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Profilegeophi
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Message 61746 - Posted: 20 Dec 2019, 16:51:28 UTC - in response to Message 61727.  

They must be dumping more into that SAM50 batch as they're are still quite a lot in the queue now.
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Les Bayliss
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Message 61749 - Posted: 20 Dec 2019, 18:07:46 UTC - in response to Message 61746.  

It now says 7,560 tasks for batch 859.
They must have thought of something else to look for. :)
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wolfman1360

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Message 61750 - Posted: 20 Dec 2019, 18:19:37 UTC

Just pulled in some new work. Just enough to keep some Windows boxes busy for a few days :) Luckily I just installed Windows updates on everything last night, so I should be fine for at least a week.
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lazlo_vii

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Message 61752 - Posted: 20 Dec 2019, 20:51:18 UTC
Last modified: 20 Dec 2019, 20:57:47 UTC

Some "back of the envelope" number crunching for Weather At Home 2 (wah2) hosts and jobs:

Jobs in Progress (53090) divided by the numbers of Users Active in the Last 24 Hours (282) equals an average of Jobs downloaded per user of 188.262411348. Multiplying this by the average run time of the last 100 jobs (112.1 hours) gives an Average Total Run Time of 21104.216312057 hours per host. Dividing this by 24 (hours in day) gives 879.342346336 days. Then divide that by 8 to give a very generous assumption that the average user is running a computer with 8 cores running 24/7 and you get 109.917793292 Days.

109.917793292 Days of work stored per user on average. Wouldn't it be better for the project in the long run if that number was an order of magnitude smaller?
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Les Bayliss
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Message 61753 - Posted: 20 Dec 2019, 20:57:35 UTC - in response to Message 61752.  

It would be better.
And it's been discussed by the project.

But try telling that to people who never look at their results, never visit this board, and don't seem to care about the research.
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lazlo_vii

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Message 61754 - Posted: 20 Dec 2019, 21:00:50 UTC

I would propose that the points awarded for a work unit be decreased on log scale based on the turn around time of the host.
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Message 61755 - Posted: 20 Dec 2019, 21:10:03 UTC

And it's a little more complicated than the back of the envelope calculation. So many of the tasks in progress, really aren't in progress. With deadlines nearly a year, tasks having been abandoned in certain ways on some hosts, that for whatever reason, aren't crunching any more, are still seen as in progress. How many haven't trickled for 2 months or more, I don't know, but I'm sure it's a lot. The deadline should really be shortened to something far less than a year (1-3 months depending on the model type?) so that that number is more representative of the number in progress, and the tasks get re-issued quicker if they time out on a host no longer crunching. Just my opinion...
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Message 61756 - Posted: 20 Dec 2019, 22:40:39 UTC - in response to Message 61755.  

And it's a little more complicated than the back of the envelope calculation. So many of the tasks in progress, really aren't in progress. With deadlines nearly a year, tasks having been abandoned in certain ways on some hosts, that for whatever reason, aren't crunching any more, are still seen as in progress. How many haven't trickled for 2 months or more, I don't know, but I'm sure it's a lot. The deadline should really be shortened to something far less than a year (1-3 months depending on the model type?) so that that number is more representative of the number in progress, and the tasks get re-issued quicker if they time out on a host no longer crunching. Just my opinion...

I feel like the current time given is more representative of a single core system from 16-18 years ago. Perhaps it's time to decrease that to something more realistic so the research and results can have quicker turnaround times.
Lord knows I'm guilty enough of doing bad things - a few years ago I was struggling trying to get a machine to behave and ended up with tons of either aborted or failed tasks. This certainly isn't a set it and forget it project when Boinc is set to have 10 days of work.
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ProfileIain Inglis
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Message 61800 - Posted: 24 Dec 2019, 18:02:14 UTC

3,500 "Australia and New Zealand" 31-month simulations at 50 km have just been added in batch #860 (batch list).
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ProfileDave Jackson
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Message 61914 - Posted: 6 Jan 2020, 17:28:44 UTC - in response to Message 61800.  

There are two new Windows batches in testing which may well lead to some main site work once they are finished.

It also looks like some time this week there may be some more of the N216 tasks which on my hardware I shall avoid if possible.
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lazlo_vii

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Message 61915 - Posted: 6 Jan 2020, 18:54:01 UTC

While I would really like to test how well my CPUs can cope with multiple N216's I have set my clients to "No New Work" until I finish up the six N144's I am running. I expect them all to finish with in the next 36 hours.

I need to install my new Noctua NH-U9S CPU cooler once I clear my work queue. Hopefully that will get my server cool enough to do CPU and GPU work at the same time.
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ProfileDave Jackson
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Message 61916 - Posted: 6 Jan 2020, 20:03:07 UTC - in response to Message 61915.  

While I would really like to test how well my CPUs can cope with multiple N216's I have set my clients to "No New Work" until I finish up the six N144's I am running. I expect them all to finish with in the next 36 hours.

I need to install my new Noctua NH-U9S CPU cooler once I clear my work queue. Hopefully that will get my server cool enough to do CPU and GPU work at the same time.


Given the speed and reliability of my crystal ball my guess is you will have plenty of time to finish the N144'S before they are all gone and possibly before they are released!
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Message 61917 - Posted: 6 Jan 2020, 20:31:53 UTC - in response to Message 61915.  

While I would really like to test how well my CPUs can cope with multiple N216's

Your Ryzen 3700x will work fine if you limit the N216 to four at a time.
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lazlo_vii

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Message 61921 - Posted: 6 Jan 2020, 22:07:44 UTC - in response to Message 61917.  

Your Ryzen 3700x will work fine if you limit the N216 to four at a time.


I was hoping to do more like six at time. I think it might be possible if I can keep three on each 4 core chiplet by setting CPU affinity. That would use 12MB of the 16MB L3 per chiplet and prevent the processes from migrating between chiplets across the Infinity Fabric. I'll let you know how it turns out.
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Message 61923 - Posted: 7 Jan 2020, 0:40:59 UTC - in response to Message 61917.  

While I would really like to test how well my CPUs can cope with multiple N216's

Your Ryzen 3700x will work fine if you limit the N216 to four at a time.

Will that work for my 1700x as well?
Unfortunately the 1800x is running Windows and I have no plans to install Linux, but does the same (running all cores) apply to WAH tasks?
Will be setting max concurrent to 8 just in case, that way WCG can go ahead and scoop up the remainder.
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Les Bayliss
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Message 61924 - Posted: 7 Jan 2020, 1:16:34 UTC - in response to Message 61923.  

The WaH2 models aren't as resource needy as the N216, so use whatever you like.
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ProfileIain Inglis
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Message 61928 - Posted: 8 Jan 2020, 15:47:35 UTC

3,150 Linux-only 4-month simulations at N216 resolution have just been added in batch #861 (batch list).
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Message 61975 - Posted: 15 Jan 2020, 1:14:51 UTC - in response to Message 61914.  

There are two new Windows batches in testing which may well lead to some main site work once they are finished.


Did these 2 batches of Windows work ever appear or are they still in testing.
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Les Bayliss
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Message 61976 - Posted: 15 Jan 2020, 2:50:23 UTC - in response to Message 61975.  

They're still in testing.
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