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Random/LFSR on P2

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  • evanhevanh Posts: 15,171
    edited 2020-10-27 01:21
    All good in Silo New Zealand. :)
  • evanhevanh Posts: 15,171
    Since I couldn't wait for the new AMD 5950X CPUs (check the PassMark results) to become available, I went ahead and replaced the MB, and upgraded both the CPUs to Xeon E5-2697 V2 in the process. It cost about $400 US total for the MB and CPUs... that would have been over almost $1000 about a year ago, and about $4000 a year and half ago.
    Hard to beat second hand prices. And that's quad channel too. Likely a decent advantage.

    Yeah, the new Zen3 performance sure feels tempting to me. Sadly, supposedly due to too many models of AM4 socket CPUs overflowing the BIOS size, it looks like Ryzen 5k models won't drop into my B350 mobo. So I'm unlikely to make the move. The existing 1700X is fine of course.

  • evanhevanh Posts: 15,171
    evanh wrote: »
    All good in Silo New Zealand. :)
    We had a community case recently, one port worker tested positive after spending time on a docked container ship. It puzzled me that a ship at sea for months in this area of the world could be an infection vector. Turns out eight fresh crew also jumped on board about the same time. These fresh crew had basically been exempted from the full 14 day quarantine period.

    The ship is currently held up offshore at Sunshine Coast, Australia, and two crew have been flown to a hospital there.
  • Cluso99Cluso99 Posts: 18,069
    evanh wrote: »
    evanh wrote: »
    All good in Silo New Zealand. :)
    We had a community case recently, one port worker tested positive after spending time on a docked container ship. It puzzled me that a ship at sea for months in this area of the world could be an infection vector. Turns out eight fresh crew also jumped on board about the same time. These fresh crew had basically been exempted from the full 14 day quarantine period.

    The ship is currently held up offshore at Sunshine Coast, Australia, and two crew have been flown to a hospital there.

    Exemptions make a mockery out of the lockdowns.
    During the big Victoria lockdown workers were granted exemptions to go to Sydney for work almost without any restrictions - they had to return to the designated address to sleep! Basically no other restrictions, no quarantine. I think they had to have a clear COVID test before leaving Victoria - but they could already be infected!
  • evanhevanh Posts: 15,171
    edited 2020-10-30 07:57
    Cluso99 wrote: »
    Exemptions make a mockery out of the lockdowns.
    Yep. My sister, lives in Brisbane, was getting pissy for a while, early on, because she knew others were getting "self isolation" passes to travel into NZ and camp pretty much anywhere they chose in the North Island at least, but she'd been refused because she wanted to cross the Cook Straight. That all stopped when the Auckland outbreak happened. It became very clear the exemptions were too risky.

    Apparently, diplomats are still exempt though.

  • Yes, please keep on topic.
  • evanhevanh Posts: 15,171
    Okay, will do. I hope all the x86 CPU talk isn't off limits at least?
  • evanh wrote: »
    Okay, will do. I hope all the x86 CPU talk isn't off limits at least?

    No, that's fine :)
  • evanh wrote: »
    ... And that's quad channel too. Likely a decent advantage.
    Hard to tell with my work-loads, as I was down to three channels after the repair/upgrade when I moved from 64GB to 32GB of faster RAM I had laying around and found that two sticks were bad. Maybe a 3% improvement under 48 thread load once I replaced those two. That brings me to about the 1.5x improvement expected from moving from V0 to V2 processors with 50% more cores at a 10% reduction in clocks (now 3.0GHz all-core, vs. 3.3GHz before).

    What I find interesting is BigCrush scaling with Intel HT... each HT core equals about 0.5 physical cores. That is to say, about 1.5x, which is much higher than scaling in many benchmarks that focus on HT performance.
  • evanhevanh Posts: 15,171
    Hard to tell with my work-loads ...
    True. I only really noticed poor scaling when I was running Tony's paired 16-bit distribution tests. Those needed 4 GB of accumulators per task. When running multiple tasks, up to seven fitted, the performance of the individual task definitely took a hit. As much as half the speed. And I suspect even the single task run was likely nerf'd waiting on the DRAM. L2 and L3 caching weren't much help there I don't think.

  • I was going to avoid the expense of bringing that server back up to 64GB of fast RAM (for those freq, and similar jobs) and save the money for a 5950X build (or maybe a 5900X, if I want to also do a Threadripper build down the road).

    Congrats on 10,000 posts... I think I was (only) way over 8000 on XVBT (XtremeVisualBasicTalk) as a mod (before it finally went belly-up).
  • Cluso99Cluso99 Posts: 18,069
    And someone famous once said 640KB will be more than enough!

    Congrats for reaching the 10K milestone evan.
  • evanhevanh Posts: 15,171
    Wow, I never thought I was posting that much. I'll blame all my second guessing posts.

  • xoroshironotxoroshironot Posts: 309
    edited 2020-11-04 00:39
    I just noticed the 1st place world-record holder for 'Cinebench R15 Extreme' is selling his/her TR 3990X CPU on eBay (at a comparatively reasonable price).
    Must remain calm and resist temptation in order to hold out for DDR5 based next-gen TR.
    However, I did some calculations and determined that I could perform nearly 1000 TestU01 BigCrush runs/day, and all 64-bit rotations of PractRand out to at least 4TB within a week.
    It only takes about 1000 to 4000 BigCrush runs to reasonably demonstrate that many so-called 'good quality' PRNGs (that pass PractRand at 32TB) are not statistically random (or, at least, to derive a starting point for a focused statistical analysis).
  • evanhevanh Posts: 15,171
    Hmm, that's a lot of money to be selling off cheap so soon.

  • evanhevanh Posts: 15,171
    Wow, the Zen3's are already on the shelf here. Presume they went up on Friday our time.

    Prices are up again, that'll be to slow initail demand I presume. They're definitely giving a price advantage to the 6 and 12 core parts, so there must be quite a lot of production defects.

  • xoroshironotxoroshironot Posts: 309
    edited 2020-11-08 15:49
    I don't think the defect-free rate of ~93.5% would have changed from Zen 2, since it is the same TSMC process.
    However, binning to get enough higher-speed stock for 5900X and, especially 5950X (which must be defect-free), must be a chore. That might take away from 5800X supply, thus the higher cost.
    Also, perhaps they are cherry-picking chiplets that are both defect-free and high-binned to reserve for a future product release... maybe not, since many factors are at play here, it is hard to predict.
  • evanhevanh Posts: 15,171
    Reading some of the reviews it's becoming clear the Zen3 cores are fast! In some tests they're up to double the speed of the Zen2 core. Fast enough to be substantially memory speed limited now. Faster DIMMs makes them all go a lot faster. Even the 5600X.

    I guess one reason may be something like AVX2 getting enabled, not that I know for sure. Zen1 and Zen2 parts I've noticed are flagged as not supporting AVX2 in the Linux kernel even though they do.

  • The recent notable news seems to be that (perhaps) interleaving plays about an 8% performance improvement role when four sticks of RAM are used instead of two sticks. Not like actual quad-channel, but respectable. Oddly, RAM low-latency seems to be more important than speed in many benchmarks, as 3200 CL14 often outperforms faster RAM, but this will be moot as manufacturers rush to release affordable combined low-latency high-speed RAM. 3800/3866 CL14 might become popular (since actual support for 4000 is spotty, but will improve some with new AGESA soon). The ability to overclock Zen 3 to good effect is just icing on the cake, but better have a good motherboard VRM and CPU cooling solution (especially for 5950X). I'm hyped... need to wait a few months for price/availability to shake out.
  • evanhevanh Posts: 15,171
    edited 2020-11-22 00:45
    I wonder a little how Apple have designed the M1 high-performance core. They've put a lot of execution units in there, to say the least! Each high-performance core features 192 kB of L1 instruction cache, 128 kB of L1 data cache, 8-wide instruction decode, and maybe 16 execution units.

    To make that work together effectively, it would need many data paths between all those execution units and the L1 data cache. Normally that would be many SRAM ports, which costs a lot of transistors ... and bigger RAM blocks also negatively impact latency. 128 kB is bigger than anyone else. Would be L2 territory normally.

    I wonder if maybe Apple have done something like the prop2 with its hubRAM crosspoint switch. Or maybe just separate smaller L1 cache blocks grouped with select execution units.

  • xoroshironotxoroshironot Posts: 309
    edited 2020-11-23 22:17
    I think M1 is just Apple's 'good enough' transition solution... I expect wonders from next-gen.
    Granted M1 is already on 5nm and has 16 billion transistors, but I'm sure they will figure out some way to move it forward.

    On the AMD front, PBO2 (coming soon) for 5000X CPUs employs opportunistic under/over-volting to facilitate optimal boosting... sweet, as the best will only get better, at no extra cost.

    Edit: I forgot the link: Here
  • evanhevanh Posts: 15,171
    Reading those slides it says that PBO2 behaviour is unique per chip. That means it must measure performance limits somehow. So it automatically achieves what an overclocker would do by hand.

    I have to admit, I wouldn't be expecting to beat those single core increases they're showing by hand myself. Certainly sounds cool if it works.

  • evanhevanh Posts: 15,171
    edited 2020-12-12 10:09
    Ow, just gave myself a scare ... I wanted to clean the root volume after a large update. After the install and beginning of reboot there is Grub option for recovery mode where it later has clean packages option. Something I've done a few times before without issue.

    This time, for some unknown reason, it was happy to purge some 3.5 GB of system files, which I duly said yes to. Net result of which was no more desktop!

    After some fretting over reformatting the root volume and starting afresh, I went back through the recovery menus to see what else I could do. And not too surprisingly there was an update packages option. There wasn't much to lose by trying it ... and blow me down, it reinstalled everything I needed. Doesn't seem to be anything missing, so far at least.

  • xoroshironotxoroshironot Posts: 309
    edited 2020-12-15 16:09
    I have been running Ubuntu under Windows Subsystem for Linux (WSL) for a few years now, and haven't looked back.
    On one of my Windows 10 PC I have two different versions of Ubuntu installed simultaneously (each with a different version of gcc set as default, which is handy on occasion).
    WSL 2 furthered its utility (since I had been constanly bumping into time related issues/bugs while programming using WSL 1, which are now fixed).
    However, I do still keep recent copies of Knoppix and Ophcrack on seperate USB drives, just in case of emergency.

    Honestly, I don't use Linux anywhere near to its full extent, since I spent almost 40 years developing research tools under DOS/Windows.
  • evanhevanh Posts: 15,171
    Who does? For me, Linux is just a way to keep marginally clean while still having a life in modern computer hardware. The lesser of the evils.

    Haven't really had a non-PC option for well over 20 years. I got interested in the Playstation3 as a desktop system but it wasn't long before the writing was on the wall there too. Sony went through a rapid transition about that time where it stopped being a gadgets company and stated being a media company.

  • evanh wrote: »
    Ryzen 5k models won't drop into my B350 mobo.
    The winds are changing... do some research.
  • evanhevanh Posts: 15,171
    evanh wrote: »
    Ryzen 5k models won't drop into my B350 mobo.
    The winds are changing... do some research.
    I know some 470 and 450 boards are starting to get Zen3 support but I haven't seen anything mentioned for 350 yet. All the comments of possible extending is always about the 470/450 chipsets. I've been checking for any BIOS updates for my Asus Prime but latest is still from July. Given the later AMD patches always arrived late for my board I doubt the July update included any Zen3 support.

  • ASRock, so far: Here
    Not sure if 300 chipset support of Zen3 will spread to other OEMs.
  • evanhevanh Posts: 15,171
    Thanks, good read. It might all come together yet. Now I just need to find a game I like that will benefit. Lol, really, the 1700X is working just fine.

  • xoroshironotxoroshironot Posts: 309
    edited 2021-01-12 18:55
    I just upgraded my WSL to WSL 2 for BigCrush on my big Windows server... horrible, as it fills up all physical memory and spills out to the page file (slamming my SSD when I wasn't looking).
    Unlike WSL, WSL 2 apparently uses a monolithic VM Windows process for Linux which has severe memory management (overhead and garbage collection, it seems) issues when loading all cores, and none of the proposed fixes make sense to me in that use case scenario.
    I find that if I drop the running processes in the VM from 48 down to 36 it seems to work, but the per process speed is about 15% slower also... so it looks like upgrading the RAM back to 64GB would only solve part of the problem.
    On the plus side, I was able to set up the entire working environment I use about 5x faster... which is of little consolation.
    I'm going back to the original WSL, which in my arrogance I had removed the distros pinned to it.

    Edit: After some further investigation, I see that the monolithic VM Linux kernel of WSL 2 might not be NUMA aware, which might explain the speed loss and memory utilization issues in a dual CPU system. Not sure, and I do not feel like building my own custom kernel to find out if I am right, as it is too much of a distraction from my current work.

    Edit 2: The switch back to WSL 1 was easy (through PowerShell): 'wsl --set-version Ubuntu-20.04 1'... then re-launch my bash scripts, and done. Before the switch-back, all of my workloads had been quickly installed and recompiled 'native' under WSL 2 specifically for my (pair of) Xeon E5-2697 V2 processors (which I failed to do when I upgraded the CPUs), so it might be slightly faster than before.

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