GPU Configuration Guide for Windows
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GPU Configuration Guide for Windows
All,
Since we have a huge number of new users all tackling the COVID-19 virus, I thought I'd finish a project I've been picking away at for some time. Namely, a config guide for windows specifically for GPU, Multi-GPU, and CPU-GPU folding setups. Sometimes the auto installation ends up working fine, but for when it doesn't, this should help people get the right configuration.
https://greenfoldingathome.com/2020/03/ ... indows-10/
I'd appreciate it if experienced folders give this a read and let me know if it is
A. Even helpful
B. If and where it is confusing
C. Did I miss anything?
Since we have a huge number of new users all tackling the COVID-19 virus, I thought I'd finish a project I've been picking away at for some time. Namely, a config guide for windows specifically for GPU, Multi-GPU, and CPU-GPU folding setups. Sometimes the auto installation ends up working fine, but for when it doesn't, this should help people get the right configuration.
https://greenfoldingathome.com/2020/03/ ... indows-10/
I'd appreciate it if experienced folders give this a read and let me know if it is
A. Even helpful
B. If and where it is confusing
C. Did I miss anything?
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- Location: Greenwood MS USA
Re: GPU Configuration Guide for Windows
I have just one comment. F@H does a much better job of detecting GPUs at install than on startup, so install the hardware before you install the client. Or, if you have trouble detecting all your new hardware, write down your Name, Team number, and Passkey, then uninstall including data. now reinstall and (almost always) it will run better.
Other than that, my experience matches yours. (I do not leave a CPU for 'Windows' but my GPU machines are dedicated folders)
Other than that, my experience matches yours. (I do not leave a CPU for 'Windows' but my GPU machines are dedicated folders)
Tsar of all the Rushers
I tried to remain childlike, all I achieved was childish.
A friend to those who want no friends
I tried to remain childlike, all I achieved was childish.
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Re: GPU Configuration Guide for Windows
In the CPU section, you wrote "A dual-GPU computer should have a 3-core CPU". Does anyone make a 3 core CPU? I thought they all jumped from 2 to 4. You might also want to touch on hyperthreading here - in CPUs with 2 hyperthreads per core, do you need a dedicated core per GPU or just a dedicated hyperthread?
When discussing passkeys & the QRB, you should mention that you have to return 10 work units before you start getting the bonus.
Something you should mention somewhere - when changing the hardware configuration in any way, you should finish all current work units on that machine before making the change. An example: I had a two GPU setup with a RTX2080Ti as GPU:0 and an GTX970 as GPU:1. I wanted to swap out the 970 for a 1660 Super, so I finished folding the WU on the 970 and then shutdown the system to make the card swap. When I started back up again, the clients decided that the 1660 was GPU:0 and the 2080Ti was now GPU:1, even though I didn't touch the 2080Ti. As a result, the WU the 2080Ti had been working on got dumped because the new GPU:0 (the 1660) couldn't pick up where the old GPU:0 (the 2080Ti) had left off.
In the section on configuring the CPU slot, you should warn people about setting the number of CPU threads to values that are high primes, or that have high prime factors (where "high" is seven or higher). For example, on a 16 core CPU with one GPU, you wouldn't want to set the number of threads to 14. 12 would be better, or two CPU slots with 8 & 6 threads.
When discussing passkeys & the QRB, you should mention that you have to return 10 work units before you start getting the bonus.
Something you should mention somewhere - when changing the hardware configuration in any way, you should finish all current work units on that machine before making the change. An example: I had a two GPU setup with a RTX2080Ti as GPU:0 and an GTX970 as GPU:1. I wanted to swap out the 970 for a 1660 Super, so I finished folding the WU on the 970 and then shutdown the system to make the card swap. When I started back up again, the clients decided that the 1660 was GPU:0 and the 2080Ti was now GPU:1, even though I didn't touch the 2080Ti. As a result, the WU the 2080Ti had been working on got dumped because the new GPU:0 (the 1660) couldn't pick up where the old GPU:0 (the 2080Ti) had left off.
In the section on configuring the CPU slot, you should warn people about setting the number of CPU threads to values that are high primes, or that have high prime factors (where "high" is seven or higher). For example, on a 16 core CPU with one GPU, you wouldn't want to set the number of threads to 14. 12 would be better, or two CPU slots with 8 & 6 threads.
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Rig2 (Part-Time GPU): Intel Q6600, Gigabyte 965P-S3 Board, EVGA 460 GTX Graphics, 8 GB Kingston 800 DDR2 Ram, Seasonic Gold X-650 PSU, Artic Cooling Freezer 7 CPU Cooler - Location: United States
Re: GPU Configuration Guide for Windows
Thanks. I added a troubleshooting section with the info recommending a clean install of the hardware before the client.JimboPalmer wrote:I have just one comment. F@H does a much better job of detecting GPUs at install than on startup, so install the hardware before you install the client. Or, if you have trouble detecting all your new hardware, write down your Name, Team number, and Passkey, then uninstall including data. now reinstall and (almost always) it will run better.
Other than that, my experience matches yours. (I do not leave a CPU for 'Windows' but my GPU machines are dedicated folders)
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- Posts: 137
- Joined: Fri Oct 21, 2011 3:24 am
- Hardware configuration: Rig1 (Dedicated SMP): AMD Phenom II X6 1100T, Gigabyte GA-880GMA-USB3 board, 8 GB Kingston 1333 DDR3 Ram, Seasonic S12 II 380 Watt PSU, Noctua CPU Cooler
Rig2 (Part-Time GPU): Intel Q6600, Gigabyte 965P-S3 Board, EVGA 460 GTX Graphics, 8 GB Kingston 800 DDR2 Ram, Seasonic Gold X-650 PSU, Artic Cooling Freezer 7 CPU Cooler - Location: United States
Re: GPU Configuration Guide for Windows
Good stuff. AMD actually made Athlon 2 X3 chips (an X4 with a defective core was re-binned as an X3). But for the most part, 3 core CPUs don't exist. I edited this whole section to just state how many free cores I recommend for that config.jonault wrote:In the CPU section, you wrote "A dual-GPU computer should have a 3-core CPU". Does anyone make a 3 core CPU? I thought they all jumped from 2 to 4. You might also want to touch on hyperthreading here - in CPUs with 2 hyperthreads per core, do you need a dedicated core per GPU or just a dedicated hyperthread?
Regarding Hyper threading, that is something I haven't tested for GPUs. For just feeding the cards, I think a hyperthread "should" work fine, so 3 GPUs could be fed off a dual-core with hyperthreading CPU. Or maybe I'm wrong...does anyone know? I don't have any hyperthreaded CPUs to test this out on.
Added thisWhen discussing passkeys & the QRB, you should mention that you have to return 10 work units before you start getting the bonus.
I added this to the topSomething you should mention somewhere - when changing the hardware configuration in any way, you should finish all current work units on that machine before making the change. An example: I had a two GPU setup with a RTX2080Ti as GPU:0 and an GTX970 as GPU:1. I wanted to swap out the 970 for a 1660 Super, so I finished folding the WU on the 970 and then shutdown the system to make the card swap. When I started back up again, the clients decided that the 1660 was GPU:0 and the 2080Ti was now GPU:1, even though I didn't touch the 2080Ti. As a result, the WU the 2080Ti had been working on got dumped because the new GPU:0 (the 1660) couldn't pick up where the old GPU:0 (the 2080Ti) had left off.
Added this alsoIn the section on configuring the CPU slot, you should warn people about setting the number of CPU threads to values that are high primes, or that have high prime factors (where "high" is seven or higher). For example, on a 16 core CPU with one GPU, you wouldn't want to set the number of threads to 14. 12 would be better, or two CPU slots with 8 & 6 threads.
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Re: GPU Configuration Guide for Windows
Would be handy to see info about remote monitoring from a mobile device or browser on another PC. A mobile app would be great if one exists.
I'm also having trouble getting the viewer to work, it's just stuck on "Demo" and I am often having connection issues and work units aren't retrieved sometimes.
I'm also having trouble getting the viewer to work, it's just stuck on "Demo" and I am often having connection issues and work units aren't retrieved sometimes.
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Re: GPU Configuration Guide for Windows
Thanks. Worked great.
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Re: GPU Configuration Guide for Windows
https://code.google.com/archive/p/hfm-net/ may be what you want to remotely monitor many clientsGingeraMan wrote:Would be handy to see info about remote monitoring from a mobile device or browser on another PC. A mobile app would be great if one exists.
I'm also having trouble getting the viewer to work, it's just stuck on "Demo" and I am often having connection issues and work units aren't retrieved sometimes.
The viewer worked with Core_a4, it is broken with Core_a7. It is on a bug list, but it does not impact the science, so is not high priority.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_F ... tive_cores
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Re: GPU Configuration Guide for Windows
One small note, that is on Windows. On OS X it will display A7, and when I had a Linux system active the viewer would also display Core_A7 WU's. There would be an occasional project that had something set wrong and the viewer would not work, but that was just a few that I have come across in the past.JimboPalmer wrote:The viewer worked with Core_a4, it is broken with Core_a7. It is on a bug list, but it does not impact the science, so is not high priority.
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Re: GPU Configuration Guide for Windows
I would argue it should have some priority as it attracts donors.JimboPalmer wrote: The viewer worked with Core_a4, it is broken with Core_a7. It is on a bug list, but it does not impact the science, so is not high priority.
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Re: GPU Configuration Guide for Windows
If I set the CPU slot to zero and GPU to -1 it will only run on GPU?
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Re: GPU Configuration Guide for Windows
You can just remove the CPU slotGingeraMan wrote:If I set the CPU slot to zero and GPU to -1 it will only run on GPU?
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Re: GPU Configuration Guide for Windows
Is there a difference between CPU and GPU work units
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Re: GPU Configuration Guide for Windows
In that the same type of work could be assigned to either, no. In practice a project is set up to run on either CPU's or GPU's. Due to the speed of GPU processing on many parallel shader cores, usually the simulation systems with larger atom counts are assigned to them. Smaller system tend to get assigned to CPU processing. There is some overlap, and some systems require features from the software that are present in the code for one and not the other.
The actual WU's have data in the format needed for the specific CPU or GPU folding core that is going to be used.
The actual WU's have data in the format needed for the specific CPU or GPU folding core that is going to be used.
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Re: GPU Configuration Guide for Windows
I found the CPU section helpful. On my configuration, 4 CPU cores seems to be the sweet-spot that allows me to fold on both GPU and CPU slots, whilst having a usable Windows experience and okay fan noise.