Message boards : Graphics cards (GPUs) : GTX1080Ti
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Waiting on the EVGA 1080 TI (maybe the Classified Edition) to get a Paschal card. | |
ID: 45131 | Rating: 0 | rate: / Reply Quote | |
Waiting on the EVGA 1080 TI (maybe the Classified Edition) to get a Paschal card. Might be announced in Jan 2017 & arrive between Feb and April. So, realistically it could be 4 to 6 months before it arrives. NV could make one right now based on an NV GTX Titan, but what's the point? There is no competition and probably won't be for a while. It's also a flagship card (limited demand) and for here the big question would be, does it scale? 14nm Fin-Fet is presently being used for the GTX1050 and GTX1050Ti, while the other Pascal's are 16nm, so there is a possibility a GTX1080Ti will arrive based on the 14nm fabrication. That would fit in with a new GPU in 6months time and might mean a ~10 to 15% improvement in itself; justifying it's existence. NV are using two factories so it's conceivable that one will scale up while the other scales down and starts adapting for new Fabrication. ____________ FAQ's HOW TO: - Opt out of Beta Tests - Ask for Help | |
ID: 45134 | Rating: 0 | rate: / Reply Quote | |
Now that we can fully utilize the GPU under Linux with SWAN_SYNC=1, I can compare the performance of my cards for real. GPU RAC
GTX 1080Ti (Pascal) 1.450.000~1.550.000
GTX 1080 (Pascal) 1.150.000~1.200.000
TITAN X (Maxwell) 1.050.000~1.150.000
GTX 980Ti (Maxwell) 950.000~1.050.000 If there was a month with continuous work, these numbers could be more precise. | |
ID: 51059 | Rating: 0 | rate: / Reply Quote | |
Impressive. | |
ID: 51062 | Rating: 0 | rate: / Reply Quote | |
Impressive. How do I access this xml file on linux? I can tell you once I find it. | |
ID: 51063 | Rating: 0 | rate: / Reply Quote | |
I just typed in "nvidia-smi" into the terminal and it gave me a basic overview, I have a watercooled evga hybrid 1080ti and it is reporting with SWAN_SYNC enabled: | |
ID: 51064 | Rating: 0 | rate: / Reply Quote | |
Thanks for the stats. A more detailed view is available using "nvidia-smi -a" | |
ID: 51068 | Rating: 0 | rate: / Reply Quote | |
Linux with SWAN_SYNC enabled is the highest performing out of any OS. With SWAN_SYNC enabled you can achieve a true 100% usage on seemingly any CPU/GPU combination. I have noticed that the BUS interface load has significantly decreased with SWAN_SYNC enabled, most likely allowing this true 100% utilization. | |
ID: 51071 | Rating: 0 | rate: / Reply Quote | |
How do I prove I have SWAN_SYNC enabled??? /lib/systemd/system/boinc-client.service First line under Service: Environment="SWAN_SYNC=1" Reboot: printenv And SWAN_SYNC is not shown. | |
ID: 51099 | Rating: 0 | rate: / Reply Quote | |
Some of your computers have it enables, others don't. | |
ID: 51100 | Rating: 0 | rate: / Reply Quote | |
How do I prove I have SWAN_SYNC enabled???The printenv shows the environment of the current user, and the boinc client service is running under a different account (named boinc; that's why we couldn't apply SWAN_SYNC for a very long time to a BOINC manager from the repo), so you can't check it this way. The correct method (beside checking the "CUDA syncronisation mode" in the stderr.txt file in /var/lib/boinc-client/slots/X folder, where X is the number of the GPUGrid app's slot, or as Zalster described) is by checking the CPU usage of the acemd binary in the task manager (either under Windows or Linux too). If the acemd binary consumes 1 CPU thread (4 CPUs: 25%, 6 CPUs: 16-17%, 8 CPUs: 12-13%, 12 CPUs 8%) then it's OK. If you see lower CPU usage, then SWAN_SYNC is not applied. The other method is to check the task list of the given host on the GPUGrid website: if the CPU time is (nearly) equals to the GPU time, then SWAN_SYNC is applied. | |
ID: 51101 | Rating: 0 | rate: / Reply Quote | |
Message boards : Graphics cards (GPUs) : GTX1080Ti