It sports two Xeon X5355 CPUs, each with 4 cores (so, 8 total). All 8 cores are accounted for in /proc/cpuinfo - interlaced between physical IDs 0 and 1 almost randomly (it goes "physical ID" 0, 0, 1, 0, 1, 0, 1, 1 in order of core IDs 0...7).
F@H client reports all of them:
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09:03:41:WU00:FS02:0xa8:************************************ System ************************************
09:03:41:WU00:FS02:0xa8:        CPU: Intel(R) Xeon(R) CPU X5355 @ 2.66GHz
09:03:41:WU00:FS02:0xa8:     CPU ID: GenuineIntel Family 6 Model 15 Stepping 7
09:03:41:WU00:FS02:0xa8:       CPUs: 8
09:03:41:WU00:FS02:0xa8:     Memory: 31.36GiB
09:03:41:WU00:FS02:0xa8:Free Memory: 29.42GiB
09:03:41:WU00:FS02:0xa8:    Threads: POSIX_THREADS
09:03:41:WU00:FS02:0xa8: OS Version: 5.4
09:03:41:WU00:FS02:0xa8:Has Battery: false
09:03:41:WU00:FS02:0xa8: On Battery: false
09:03:41:WU00:FS02:0xa8: UTC Offset: -8
09:03:41:WU00:FS02:0xa8:        PID: 1515
09:03:41:WU00:FS02:0xa8:        CWD: /home/falcon/fahclient/work
09:03:41:WU00:FS02:0xa8:********************************************************************************I have 3 slots - one CPU (3 thread, leaving one for GPU) one GPU, then another CPU (4 thread). The main star of the show is an R9 280x, which performs admirably once my "house of cards balancing on the head of a toothpick" style software setup actually works (I boot with Alt, select "Windows" to boot Linux, then once I get a black screen, I Ctrl+Alt+F2 over to the console, log in, cd to /fahclient, and run FAHClient. If i try setting it up as a service, it fails to run GPU workunits with the dreaded "Error initializing context: clCreateCommandQueue (-6)" error every time - but not if I run it from the console).
The CPU workunits seem to be... how do you say... underperforming, even for a CPU that scores only about 1900 on Passmark these days (compared to what, 33000 for a new Ryzen?). But they underperform in a strange way - the slots intermittently start reporting that they have "6 days" ETA, then crash down to mere hours while the other slot gets the "6 days" curse.
I looked into top, and I found the culprit:
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top - 01:12:49 up 28 min,  2 users,  load average: 4.40, 4.20, 3.57
Tasks: 197 total,   4 running, 193 sleeping,   0 stopped,   0 zombie
%Cpu(s):  0.1 us,  0.9 sy, 52.3 ni, 46.7 id,  0.0 wa,  0.0 hi,  0.0 si,  0.0 st
MiB Mem :  32111.5 total,  29984.9 free,   1355.3 used,    771.3 buff/cache
MiB Swap:   1383.8 total,   1383.8 free,      0.0 used.  30359.6 avail Mem
    PID USER      PR  NI    VIRT    RES    SHR S  %CPU  %MEM     TIME+ COMMAND
   1427 falcon    39  19  382780 138436  11992 R 299.3   0.4  32:48.80 FahCore_a7
   1515 falcon    39  19  529356 147708  12980 R 112.0   0.4  10:18.62 FahCore_a8
   1261 falcon    39  19 1662988 765912  67688 R  12.6   2.3   5:44.44 FahCore_22
    520 root      -2   0       0      0      0 S   0.7   0.0   0:06.11 comp_1.0.0
     61 root      20   0       0      0      0 I   0.3   0.0   0:00.50 kworker/1:1-events
    313 root      19  -1   59900  24932  23652 S   0.3   0.1   0:00.64 systemd-journal
Wut?
Where do I even begin to diagnose this?

 I also have an nVidia RTX 3060ti running in the living room PC crunching out over 10x the PPD of this thing. It's not about points, it's about converting electricity to heat while also doing useful work! Better this way than a room heater doing no work...
 I also have an nVidia RTX 3060ti running in the living room PC crunching out over 10x the PPD of this thing. It's not about points, it's about converting electricity to heat while also doing useful work! Better this way than a room heater doing no work...
 - and you are running linux with I believe an amd gpu so you are maximising your chances of this
 - and you are running linux with I believe an amd gpu so you are maximising your chances of this