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Athlon 64 X2 4800 s/TS
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Send message Joined: 12 Feb 07 Posts: 9 Credit: 51,485 RAC: 0 |
Is anyone out there running climateprediction on an Athlon X2 4800, 2500 MHz. with 2x512 k cache? Having run hadcm3 on a Sempron 3400 for over a year I\'ve just upgraded to the faster Athlon X2 and two slab model instances (hadsm3fub) have arrived for me to run. I\'m still using my old slow 533 MHz memory and possibly because of this the s/TS per core goes up significantly when I run two models, one on each core. With one model on one core I get about 2.02 s/TS whereas with two on two cores I get about 2.32 s/TS on each, about 15% slower. I wonder if anyone with the same processor running this model could let me know what memory they have what s/TS they are getting? This would enable me to estimate they effect of faster memory. I\'m using Linux 2.6.22 but Windows figures would also help. My processor is the G2 Brisbane core but figures for the earlier cores (larger cache, slower clock) would help too. Many thanks, Richard Driscoll |
Send message Joined: 13 Jan 06 Posts: 1498 Credit: 15,613,038 RAC: 0 |
With the old version I was getting around 1.7 s/ts, but with the slower (and more careful) versions (5.40 and upwards) it is about 2.0 s/ts. My (XP SP2) PC is overclocked to around 2560MHz, and the memory is DDR500 with T1 timings. Many people have noticed that running two (or four, on quads) climate models is slower than running one climate model and something else. This is because the climate models require considerable memory bandwidth. I'm a volunteer and my views are my own. News and Announcements and FAQ |
Send message Joined: 5 Aug 04 Posts: 1496 Credit: 95,522,203 RAC: 0 |
A64 X2 4400+ with 2*1GB of Patriot DDR2 800 RAM, 2.0-3-2-5 1T (factory-certified SPD), running two Coupled Models: 2.35 s/TS v.5.44 CM 2.46 s/TS Spinup CM "We have met the enemy and he is us." -- Pogo Greetings from coastal Washington state, the scenic US Pacific Northwest. |
Send message Joined: 27 Jan 07 Posts: 300 Credit: 3,288,263 RAC: 26,370 |
With the old version I was getting around 1.7 s/ts, but with the slower (and more careful) versions (5.40 and upwards) it is about 2.0 s/ts. Riddle me this, batman. My computer here is a dual Opteron 248 HE at 2.2GHz with DDR400 ECC memory. How is it that I get better than 2.1 s/ts--faster than a Athlon X2 4800 @2.5GHz? |
Send message Joined: 5 Sep 04 Posts: 7629 Credit: 24,240,330 RAC: 0 |
It\'s probably the internal differences in architecture of the cpus. |
Send message Joined: 29 Sep 04 Posts: 2363 Credit: 14,611,758 RAC: 0 |
As far as I know the optimised HADCMs run rather faster on Linux than Windows. Could be another factor to take into account. Cpdn news |
Send message Joined: 12 Feb 07 Posts: 9 Credit: 51,485 RAC: 0 |
Thanks everyone for the replies. Mike ==== \"With the old version I was getting around 1.7 s/ts, but with the slower (and more careful) versions (5.40 and upwards) it is about 2.0 s/ts.\" Sorry, will you explain this, I don\'t understand. \"My (XP SP2) PC is overclocked to around 2560MHz, and the memory is DDR500 with T1 timings. Many people have noticed that running two (or four, on quads) climate models is slower than running one climate model and something else. This is because the climate models require considerable memory bandwidth.\" Is your Athlon the pre-AM2 version with DDR memory rather than DDR2? Which one? Are your 1.7 and 2.0 s/TS figs. with just one hadsm3 running? Thanks, Richard |
Send message Joined: 27 Jan 07 Posts: 300 Credit: 3,288,263 RAC: 26,370 |
As far as I know the optimised HADCMs run rather faster on Linux than Windows. Could be another factor to take into account. Oh, I thought we were comparing HadSM models. If not, then I get about 2.2 s/ts on those HadCM models. That makes a bit more sense. I guess my advantage is that with two physical CPUs (vs cores on the Athlon), because the CPUs only have to share main memory (not cache). Could that be a reason for his reduced performance running two tasks? Also, Richard is running Linux kernel 2.6.22, and I\'m running Linux kernel 2.6.21. It appears our setups are similar. |
Send message Joined: 13 Jan 06 Posts: 1498 Credit: 15,613,038 RAC: 0 |
Thanks everyone for the replies. There have been a number of versions of HadCM3. Prior to version 5.40 of HadCM3, the compiler was not inserting floating point checks after each calculation, but after this point the checks were added on the Windows builds. So on Windows, version 5.44 is slower than version 5.08 (but less likely to crash due to floating point errors from the PC). I don\'t think the Linux version performs these checks, but I may be wrong.
These were DDR sticks rather than DDR2. As far as I can recall this was with two climate models running (I don\'t recall which particular one was the opposite). DDR1/500s sticks have roughly the same latency as DDR2/1000s. I\'ve just noticed that your post was talking about HadSM3 not HadCM3 at the end. On HadSM3 I get 1.56 s/ts on the PC with two running simultaneously. http://climateapps2.oucs.ox.ac.uk/cpdnboinc/result.php?resultid=7031037 I'm a volunteer and my views are my own. News and Announcements and FAQ |
Send message Joined: 4 Sep 06 Posts: 79 Credit: 5,583,517 RAC: 0 |
I had an Athlon 64X2 4200 (2,2 GHz) and 2 X 0,5 GB 667 MHz ram. That machine used 2,25 and 2,29 s/Ts on hadcm-models. |
Send message Joined: 12 Feb 08 Posts: 66 Credit: 4,877,652 RAC: 0 |
I have AMD64 X2 6000+, 3.0GHz, 2GB DDR2 800 CL5, Windows XP Pro With CM on one core and SM or AM on the other core I get: HadSM3 1.29 s/TS = 588 credit/day HadCM3 1.91 s/TS = 543 c/d HadAM3 19.42 s/TS = 444 c/d |
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