Machines at home going down now.
I should be back up this evening.
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Machines at home going down now.
I should be back up this evening.
Can somebody please explain all that in English?
I thought NPLB was running the llrnet software?
Can't anyone in the project explain anything clearly about how this works?
That article is just :jabber::jabber::jabber::jabber::jabber::jabber::jabber: :jabber::jabber::jabber::jabber:
Never mind. I don't know why I even bother to ask.
Why don't you ask your questions on the project's forum?
Most of us get by with doing the online llrnet server stuff that you are already doing.
If you want to try doing it the manual way, then you should go ask the pros.
There is no simple answer, and will require reading and studying on your part to learn something new.
It's not a Boinc project that's for sure. ;)
I have spent ALL EVENING reading on that forum, and I'm more confused than ever, and know less about what the whole thing is about.
How can they have so many sub-projects that all seem to be doing different things? I mean - aren't they just looking for prime numbers like 1,3,5,7,11,13 but really big ones?
Go IB Go
Boy neck and neck with vaughan
IronBits Free-DC 844,420
vaughan AMD Users 844,320
And IB starts to make his Move
Go IB Go
I have to shutdown 3 computers for a little re-arranging of computers for the summer. I should be all in again in about an hour or so.
Yes, as IB said. It's mainly useful for users on dial-up or with machines that don't have internet access, though before we got LLRnet it was the primary mode of contribution for the project so it adds up to a pretty sizeable total score.
Edit: Ah, I just now saw your post requesting further clarification on this. (Man, those page cutoffs are rather annoying.) Here's how it works: we have ranges of k and n (the respective variables in the k*2^n-1 mathematical form for our numbers that we test for primality). The project, at this time, covers the entire range of k=300-2000, and n increases as we do more and more work.
Before the advent of LLRnet, the primary way people distributed tasks like this would be to have a forum post listing available ranges, with files containing the numbers to test (having been pre-screened by a process called "sieving" for candidates that had small factors and could be quickly removed) linked to. Each file would take anywhere from a few days to a couple weeks (depending on how big a range the file contained, and the speed of the user's machine). A user would post in the thread stating that they would like to reserve a certain file, download that file, and run it through a client application (the most commonly used one being LLR). The admins would edit the reservations table to mark that range as reserved by user x.
When the user was done with their range, they would take the results file produced by LLR, email it to the admins, and post in the forum saying that their range was complete. Rinse, lather, and repeat. :)
Once we set up an LLRnet server at NPLB, the manual system became rather outmoded. Still, it is often useful for offline computers and other such situations, so we continue to have manual work available. We integrate this with an LLRnet setup by "reserving" large ranges for the LLRnet servers, and then reporting back in the manual threads when a given range is complete.
Regarding why we have different "team drives" (subprojects, so to speak) for manual work: each of those team drives is for a different range of k and n. For example, Drive #5 covers k=400-600, n=600K-1M (currently testing at about n=670K). Last year we completed Drive #1, which did k=400-1001, n=333K-600K. Et cetera, et cetera. We generally have different LLRnet servers keyed to particular drives: for example, IB8000 (shorthand for nplb.ironbits.net port 8000) does the 10th Drive (and earlier on covered the now-complete 8th Drive, which the 10th Drive is an extension of). IB5000 does the 6th drive, IB4000 does the 5th, and...well, you get the picture. ;)
Hope this explains things a bit! :)
Max :)
Excellent explanation .
Because we are still migrating to the new domain for your project, everywhere you see nplb.ironbits.net, can be changed to your new domain of noprimeleftbehind.net.
The old address will still work so nobody has to run around and change all their client configurations.
Eventually, nplb.ironbits.net will go away, say in about a few months, so if you are starting up new, use the new domain name.
If you are stopping and starting clients, and you only have a handle full, you could use the new domain name instead. ;)
We did it:guntotin:
Opportunities
Rank -Team -----------------Score -----Average -Daily Gain -Days to Overtake
1 -Raiders of the Lost Primes 5,562,306 -25,865 ---60,122---- 23.88 Days:thumbs:
>>>>>>>>Go Team Go<<<<<<<<
we need to keep up the same rate of closure for the next 24 days.
I hope we can all keep going.
:clap:
I'm back to port 9000 but only for 12 hours a day. I still can't run this for 24/7. Anyway, small candidates in there to test.
Carlos
It's looking really good so far! :cheers:
:rock:
:bang: It's all good :cheers:
Step aside you 2 a fast mover coming through
:train: :train: :evillaugh:
we need more power.
Anyone else up for the scalp hunt this May.
:guntotin:
A few days ago. no boot- not even a POST beep. :hair:
Shopping for replacement. This E8400 combo was new in October.:mad:
Yes Fozzie is right We Need More Power
I have been in talks with Home Land Security to funnel a few more gigawatt's here to Chicago to handle my increase in output.
But I can only do so Much
Please if you can spare just a Bit of your power to help in this the Last Push of Spring 2009
Help Make Free-DC Proud
PCZ Knock Knock 1,327,429 :weggy: :D :beep:
Most of my soldiers have gone AWOL after hearing the noise of the approaching horde. :eek:
I'll have to try and round them up.
Free-DC won't even come close to ROLP by the end of the month on pairs processed score! They are 600,000+ behind with 6 days left and only putting out a paultry score of under 1,000 an hour now.
PCZ said it best. It looks like the soldiers have gone AWOL. Ha ha ha. :rotfl:
Gary
The demonstration of Free-DC CPU power is taking place in here.
:moon: