cpu speed

If you're new to FAH and need help getting started or you have very basic questions, start here.

Moderators: Site Moderators, FAHC Science Team

Post Reply
mx500torid
Posts: 2
Joined: Fri Jan 18, 2013 5:25 am

cpu speed

Post by mx500torid »

Will cpu speed affect ppd on a gpu? On my system will it help to bump my 2600k from 3.6 to 4.5 GHZ to get more ppd from a 290x GPU? I have 20% cores dedicated to the gpu and the other 80% are crunching on WCG. Will it help on an Nvidia card? Thank you in advance.
bruce
Posts: 20824
Joined: Thu Nov 29, 2007 10:13 pm
Location: So. Cal.

Re: cpu speed

Post by bruce »

Welcome to foldingforum.org, mx500torid.

For the CPUs which are used to support the GPUs, the speed is unimportant. If you fold with a CPU slot or run WCG, the CPU speed and the number of CPU cores allocated are very significant.
davidcoton
Posts: 1094
Joined: Wed Nov 05, 2008 3:19 pm
Location: Cambridge, UK

Re: cpu speed

Post by davidcoton »

The usual recommendation is to use one CPU thread for each (or possibly for every two) GPUs, though I don't recall any specific tests of performance. More than one CPU thread will not help, AFAICT.

CPU processor speed will only marginally affect GPU performance, since the main CPU function is to control the data transfer, which is almost certainly limited by bus bandwidth rather than processor throughput.
Image
mx500torid
Posts: 2
Joined: Fri Jan 18, 2013 5:25 am

Re: cpu speed

Post by mx500torid »

Thank you both for the speedy reply.
bruce
Posts: 20824
Joined: Thu Nov 29, 2007 10:13 pm
Location: So. Cal.

Re: cpu speed

Post by bruce »

davidcoton wrote:CPU processor speed will only marginally affect GPU performance, since the main CPU function is to control the data transfer, which is almost certainly limited by bus bandwidth rather than processor throughput.
The CPU is also responsible for managing the checkpoint data, and since that data must always represent the entire protein in the same state, GPU processing is synchronized and temporarily suspended. For most systems, that represents a brief pause, the duration of which is dominated by the speed of your disk subsystem (and also depending on how your system manages the disk cache). CPU speed MIGHT represent a small fraction of that, too, but a small fraction of a small fraction can be neglected.
Post Reply