Message boards : Number crunching : GigaFLOPs of CPU
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Toilet Paper 5 Send message Joined: 22 Feb 21 Posts: 2 Credit: 94 RAC: 0 |
Hello guys. I am new here to Rosetta on BOINC. I already know about GigaFLOPs, but I can't seem to find my CPU gigaFLOPs for this computer. Is it in my stats page? - Alex F. |
Falconet Send message Joined: 9 Mar 09 Posts: 353 Credit: 1,227,479 RAC: 753 |
Start by opening the BOINC Manager, go to tools and click on "Run CPU Benchmarks". Then do a project update. Run a few tasks and go to your account page on Rosetta@home, find "Computers on this account", click on details of the computer you want to check and click on "Application Details". You'll see a Gigaflop number which is based on the Rosetta tasks you ran. If you simply want the GIGAFLOPS derived from the BOINC benchmark, then simply run the BOINC benchmark, do a project update and check the floating point value at your PC page (which by the way, is this page - https://boinc.bakerlab.org/rosetta/show_host_detail.php?hostid=6035978 ). 1000 million ops/second would mean 1 Gigaflops, 2500 would mean 2.5 Gigaflops, etc. Your CPU seems like a slow, low power CPU so I wouldn't expect the floating point value to be very high. |
Toilet Paper 5 Send message Joined: 22 Feb 21 Posts: 2 Credit: 94 RAC: 0 |
Thank you, I will do that. My gigaflops are around 5 GFLOPs, which is quite slow, since this is a Chromebook. My friend's computer is 11.7 GFLOPs. :) - Alex F. |
Falconet Send message Joined: 9 Mar 09 Posts: 353 Credit: 1,227,479 RAC: 753 |
Per the BOINC benchmark, each core of your CPU has around 2.1 Gigaflops. https://boinc.bakerlab.org/rosetta/show_host_detail.php?hostid=6035978 If you want to know Gigaflops based on the BOINC benchmark, look at floating point ops/second and not integer. |
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Number crunching :
GigaFLOPs of CPU
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