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Xeon(R) CPU E5-2620 still useful?

Posted: Tue May 27, 2025 3:39 pm
by parkut
A friend has been running his repurposed server for years, but now fails jobs immediately. I wonder if the CPU is still capable?
14:29:28:WU01:FS00:Starting
14:29:28:WU01:FS00:Removing old file 'work/01/logfile_01-20250527-135728.txt'
14:29:28:WU01:FS00:Running FahCore: /usr/bin/FAHCoreWrapper /var/lib/fahclient/cores/cores.foldingathome.org/lin/64bit-avx-256/a8-0.0.12/Core_a8.fah/FahCore_a8 -dir 01 -suffix 01 -version 706 -lifeline 1123 -checkpoint 15 -np 24
14:29:28:WU01:FS00:Started FahCore on PID 508020
14:29:28:WU01:FS00:Core PID:508024
14:29:28:WU01:FS00:FahCore 0xa8 started
14:29:29:WU01:FS00:FahCore returned: INTERRUPTED (102 = 0x66)

21:58:14:****************************** FAHClient ******************************
21:58:14: Version: 7.6.13
21:58:14: Author: Joseph Coffland <joseph@cauldrondevelopment.com>
21:58:14: Copyright: 2020 foldingathome.org
21:58:14: Homepage: https://foldingathome.org/
21:58:14: Date: Apr 28 2020
21:58:14: Time: 04:20:16
21:58:14: Revision: 5a652817f46116b6e135503af97f18e094414e3b
21:58:14: Branch: master
21:58:14: Compiler: GNU 8.3.0
21:58:14: Options: -std=c++11 -ffunction-sections -fdata-sections -O3 -funroll-loops
21:58:14: -fno-pie
21:58:14: Platform: linux2 4.19.0-5-amd64
21:58:14: Bits: 64
21:58:14: Mode: Release
21:58:14: Args: --child /etc/fahclient/config.xml --run-as fahclient
21:58:14: --pid-file=/var/run/fahclient.pid --daemon
21:58:14: Config: /etc/fahclient/config.xml
21:58:14:******************************** CBang ********************************
21:58:14: Date: Apr 25 2020
21:58:14: Time: 00:07:53
21:58:14: Revision: ea081a3b3b0f4a37c4d0440b4f1bc184197c7797
21:58:14: Branch: master
21:58:14: Compiler: GNU 8.3.0
21:58:14: Options: -std=c++11 -ffunction-sections -fdata-sections -O3 -funroll-loops
21:58:14: -fno-pie -fPIC
21:58:14: Platform: linux2 4.19.0-5-amd64
21:58:14: Bits: 64
21:58:14: Mode: Release
21:58:14:******************************* System ********************************
21:58:14: CPU: Intel(R) Xeon(R) CPU E5-2620 v2 @ 2.10GHz
21:58:14: CPU ID: GenuineIntel Family 6 Model 62 Stepping 4
21:58:14: CPUs: 24
21:58:14: Memory: 31.34GiB
21:58:14:Free Memory: 30.49GiB
21:58:14: Threads: POSIX_THREADS
21:58:14: OS Version: 5.15
21:58:14:Has Battery: false
21:58:14: On Battery: false
21:58:14: UTC Offset: 0
21:58:14: PID: 1123
21:58:14: CWD: /var/lib/fahclient
21:58:14: OS: Linux 5.15.0-139-generic x86_64
21:58:14: OS Arch: AMD64
21:58:14: GPUs: 0
21:58:14: CUDA: Not detected: Failed to open dynamic library 'libcuda.so':
21:58:14: libcuda.so: cannot open shared object file: No such file or
21:58:14: directory
21:58:14: OpenCL: Not detected: Failed to open dynamic library 'libOpenCL.so':
21:58:14: libOpenCL.so: cannot open shared object file: No such file or
21:58:14: directory
21:58:14:******************************* libFAH ********************************
21:58:14: Date: Apr 15 2020
21:58:14: Time: 21:43:24
21:58:14: Revision: 216968bc7025029c841ed6e36e81a03a316890d3
21:58:14: Branch: master
21:58:14: Compiler: GNU 8.3.0
21:58:14: Options: -std=c++11 -ffunction-sections -fdata-sections -O3 -funroll-loops
21:58:14: -fno-pie
21:58:14: Platform: linux2 4.19.0-5-amd64
21:58:14: Bits: 64
21:58:14: Mode: Release
21:58:14:***********************************************************************

Re: Xeon(R) CPU E5-2620 still useful?

Posted: Tue May 27, 2025 4:01 pm
by muziqaz
None of the above shows that it is failing.
If CPU fails a WU, there would be trail in the logs showing where a CPU starts the work and fails. Your logs show none of that

Re: Xeon(R) CPU E5-2620 still useful?

Posted: Tue May 27, 2025 11:24 pm
by arisu
What project is it trying to fold? There have been certain issues with 12474 on Linux that is crashing in a way that looks like the core is just being paused (returning interrupted instead of failed): viewtopic.php?p=370137

The issue is being investigated internally.

To answer the question in the topic though, yes, the E5-2620 is still useful and probably will be for quite some time. Newer hardware would be faster of course, but there are people who fold on much older and slower systems than a Xeon from the Sandy Bridge generation and they still get work done and aid research.