Bitcoin Forum
August 08, 2024, 02:23:32 PM *
News: Latest Bitcoin Core release: 27.1 [Torrent]
 
   Home   Help Search Login Register More  
Pages: « 1 ... 814 815 816 817 818 819 820 821 822 823 824 825 826 827 828 829 830 831 832 833 834 835 836 837 838 839 840 841 842 843 844 845 846 847 848 849 850 851 852 853 854 855 856 857 858 859 860 861 862 863 [864] 865 866 867 868 869 870 871 872 873 874 875 876 877 878 879 880 881 882 883 884 885 886 887 888 889 890 891 892 893 894 895 896 897 898 899 900 901 902 903 904 905 906 907 908 909 910 911 912 913 914 ... 1135 »
  Print  
Author Topic: [ANN] cudaMiner & ccMiner CUDA based mining applications [Windows/Linux/MacOSX]  (Read 3426888 times)
tc61
Hero Member
*****
Offline Offline

Activity: 494
Merit: 500


View Profile
July 04, 2014, 07:59:11 PM
 #17261

Attached is nvMiner or otherwise known as ccminer 1.2U-a (U=unified)

I renamed it from ccminer to nvminer to make it clearer if it's a Christian release or from 3rd party.

This includes the following algos (unified from multiple devs):
heavy
mjollnir
fugue256
groestl
myr-gr
dmd-gr
jackpot
quark
anime
qubit
nist5
cryptonight
x11
x13
x14
x15

Also includes a few subtle changes and a couple of speedups to some routines.

https://ayarscloud.tonidoid.com/urljfz5fy

Have fun,
Carlo


Carlo, thank you very much!
Posted from Bitcointa.lk - #3zxWN4eLUtjDc8aZ
Amph
Legendary
*
Offline Offline

Activity: 3234
Merit: 1069



View Profile
July 04, 2014, 08:10:26 PM
 #17262

Attached is nvMiner or otherwise known as ccminer 1.2U-a (U=unified)

I renamed it from ccminer to nvminer to make it clearer if it's a Christian release or from 3rd party.

This includes the following algos (unified from multiple devs)...................
Also includes a few subtle changes and a couple of speedups to some routines.

https://ayarscloud.tonidoid.com/urljfz5fy

Have fun,
Carlo

Any chance we can take a look at the code for those speedups? Maybe easier to just setup a github Wink

was compiled from this https://github.com/djm34/ccminer, but there will be another release with fresh-algo

compiling now require only 10min, at least for me, really fast
go6ooo1212
Legendary
*
Offline Offline

Activity: 1512
Merit: 1000


quarkchain.io


View Profile
July 04, 2014, 08:16:24 PM
 #17263

This version brings me above 1600 MH/s on X15 with my PALIT 750TI OC, nice Smiley))
Amph
Legendary
*
Offline Offline

Activity: 3234
Merit: 1069



View Profile
July 04, 2014, 08:24:20 PM
 #17264

This version brings me above 1600 MH/s on X15 with my PALIT 750TI OC, nice Smiley))
can you tell me your core/mem settings? with 1300 core i'm getting only 1550
go6ooo1212
Legendary
*
Offline Offline

Activity: 1512
Merit: 1000


quarkchain.io


View Profile
July 04, 2014, 08:35:24 PM
 #17265

This version brings me above 1600 MH/s on X15 with my PALIT 750TI OC, nice Smiley))
can you tell me your core/mem settings? with 1300 core i'm getting only 1550
Sure no problem , I have a tig of 6 Palit 750TI OC/ 600W PSU / Asrock H81 Pro BTC / Celeron 1820/ 4GB RAM
Nvidia drv 340.43
MSI Afterburner 3.0.1 Core clock +108 / Mem +108
Amph
Legendary
*
Offline Offline

Activity: 3234
Merit: 1069



View Profile
July 04, 2014, 08:39:34 PM
 #17266

This version brings me above 1600 MH/s on X15 with my PALIT 750TI OC, nice Smiley))
can you tell me your core/mem settings? with 1300 core i'm getting only 1550
Sure no problem , I have a tig of 6 Palit 750TI OC/ 600W PSU / Asrock H81 Pro BTC / Celeron 1820/ 4GB RAM
Nvidia drv 340.43
MSI Afterburner 3.0.1 Core clock +108 / Mem +108

i think the drivers are making a difference here(still using the whql), because i have core 1340(default) and mem +200
cayars
Full Member
***
Offline Offline

Activity: 168
Merit: 100


View Profile
July 04, 2014, 08:40:02 PM
 #17267

Attached is nvMiner or otherwise known as ccminer 1.2U-a (U=unified)

I renamed it from ccminer to nvminer to make it clearer if it's a Christian release or from 3rd party.

This includes the following algos (unified from multiple devs)...................
Also includes a few subtle changes and a couple of speedups to some routines.

https://ayarscloud.tonidoid.com/urljfz5fy

Have fun,
Carlo

Any chance we can take a look at the code for those speedups? Maybe easier to just setup a github Wink

Sure, but then I'd have to kill ya. Smiley

I will post the sources after version B is released which will have some additional functionality. I also want to clean up 3 or 4 more functions first.
Maybe also add overclocking of core and memory as command line arguments too (similar to SGMiner).

BTW, I forgot to mention this does have the new code djm34 just released for the whirlpool routines.

Also  you will notice the output of shares is somewhat different:
[2014-07-04 16:25:53] GPU #1: GeForce GTX 660, 2920 khash/s
[2014-07-04 16:25:53] accepted: 46/47 (97.87%), 6425 kh/s (5960-47) - Yay
[2014-07-04 16:25:56] GPU #1: GeForce GTX 660, 3548 khash/s
[2014-07-04 16:25:56] accepted: 47/48 (97.92%), 7052 kh/s (5982-48) - Yay
[2014-07-04 16:25:57] GPU #1: GeForce GTX 660, 3527 khash/s
[2014-07-04 16:25:57] accepted: 48/49 (97.96%), 7031 kh/s (6004-49) - Yay
removed a few lines
[2014-07-04 16:26:03] accepted: 50/51 (98.04%), 6697 kh/s (6055) - Yay
[2014-07-04 16:26:03] GPU #0: GeForce GTX 660, 3364 khash/s
[2014-07-04 16:26:03] accepted: 51/52 (98.08%), 6389 kh/s (6095) - Yay
[2014-07-04 16:26:04] GPU #0: GeForce GTX 660, 455.99 khash/s

You'll notice right before the YAY there is a number in parenthesis.  Possible a number dash number.
This is the average of the last 50 hashes submitted.  If there is a dash and another number (1 to 50) then the program was just started.  The number after the dash is the number of shares submitted.  So if it's 10 then the "average" is based on 10 shares.  If it's dash 30 then the average is for 30 shares, etc.  Once there is no dash number then you know you have over 50 shares submitted and the average is just based on the last 50 shares submitted.  

You can see the difference in the two bolded ones above.

It's a bit more accurate indication of what to expect on a pool.  For example if you submit a rejected share the hash won't count but it will lower your overall average hash rate.  I "manipulated" the running program on purpose at the start to get some rejected shares to help show this.  So you can see from the results above the "average" is lower than what is traditionally displayed due to the rejects.

The last 50 is typically good enough but an algo like jha (jackpot) is very fast and you will still see the average jump around a bit.

Carlo, thank you very much!
Posted from Bitcointa.lk - #3zxWN4eLUtjDc8aZ

Welcome

Is there a Linux version?

Not at present but after I publish the revised source code anyone could compile it on Linux.

Carlo
go6ooo1212
Legendary
*
Offline Offline

Activity: 1512
Merit: 1000


quarkchain.io


View Profile
July 04, 2014, 08:50:33 PM
 #17268

This version brings me above 1600 MH/s on X15 with my PALIT 750TI OC, nice Smiley))
can you tell me your core/mem settings? with 1300 core i'm getting only 1550
Sure no problem , I have a tig of 6 Palit 750TI OC/ 600W PSU / Asrock H81 Pro BTC / Celeron 1820/ 4GB RAM
Nvidia drv 340.43
MSI Afterburner 3.0.1 Core clock +108 / Mem +108

i think the drivers are making a difference here(still using the whql), because i have core 1340(default) and mem +200
half of mine are working at 1320 , other half at 1340 ,but that difference is from extenders I suppose
StuffOfInterest
Sr. Member
****
Offline Offline

Activity: 401
Merit: 250


View Profile
July 04, 2014, 08:54:02 PM
Last edit: July 04, 2014, 09:04:16 PM by StuffOfInterest
 #17269

BTW, I forgot to mention this does have the new code djm34 just released for the whirlpool routines.

Also  you will notice the output of shares is somewhat different:
[2014-07-04 16:25:53] GPU #1: GeForce GTX 660, 2920 khash/s
[2014-07-04 16:25:53] accepted: 46/47 (97.87%), 6425 kh/s (5960-47) - Yay
[2014-07-04 16:25:56] GPU #1: GeForce GTX 660, 3548 khash/s
[2014-07-04 16:25:56] accepted: 47/48 (97.92%), 7052 kh/s (5982-48) - Yay
[2014-07-04 16:25:57] GPU #1: GeForce GTX 660, 3527 khash/s
[2014-07-04 16:25:57] accepted: 48/49 (97.96%), 7031 kh/s (6004-49) - Yay
removed a few lines
[2014-07-04 16:26:03] accepted: 50/51 (98.04%), 6697 kh/s (6055) - Yay
[2014-07-04 16:26:03] GPU #0: GeForce GTX 660, 3364 khash/s
[2014-07-04 16:26:03] accepted: 51/52 (98.08%), 6389 kh/s (6095) - Yay
[2014-07-04 16:26:04] GPU #0: GeForce GTX 660, 455.99 khash/s

You'll notice right before the YAY there is a number in parenthesis.  Possible a number dash number.
This is the average of the last 50 hashes submitted.  If there is a dash and another number (1 to 50) then the program was just started.  The number after the dash is the number of shares submitted.  So if it's 10 then the "average" is based on 10 shares.  If it's dash 30 then the average is for 30 shares, etc.  Once there is no dash number then you know you have over 50 shares submitted and the average is just based on the last 50 shares submitted.  

You can see the difference in the two bolded ones above.

It's a bit more accurate indication of what to expect on a pool.  For example if you submit a rejected share the hash won't count but it will lower your overall average hash rate.  I "manipulated" the running program on purpose at the start to get some rejected shares to help show this.  So you can see from the results above the "average" is lower than what is traditionally displayed due to the rejects.

The last 50 is typically good enough but an algo like jha (jackpot) is very fast and you will still see the average jump around a bit.

That's really useful for setting up my auto-switcher.  It was a pain in the butt before to gather a bunch of the numbers manually and average. With this reporting all I have to do is let the miner run for a few minutes and take the last reported number.  Thanks a lot to everyone who contributed code which went into this release.

I've tested this against x11, x13, x15, and Nist5 on NiceHash and had shared accepted for all four.  Also seem to have a (slight) speed bump for all of them but that could be the result of bad estimating on my part for all but x15 which we know is better now.

Now that there are several people making meaningful contributions, I hope an effort will be made to setup a shared (but moderated) repository to allow code submissions from multiple people and new people.  BTW, I wouldn't be upset to see the splitscreen code make it in too if it can be isolated in a way that won't break Linux builds.

I know there is not a lot of interest in some of these algorithms these days, but it would be nice to bring the algorithms over from cudaMiner into nvminer (or ccminer) so we can have one code base to mine them all.

Good work all!

BExR exchange rates on your phone's home screen.
Miner Control to get auto algorithm switching for multiple mining services. (please donate if you like)
Could Proof of Blockchain (PoBC) help secure a coin and avoid runaway ASIC mining?
tc61
Hero Member
*****
Offline Offline

Activity: 494
Merit: 500


View Profile
July 04, 2014, 09:12:43 PM
 #17270

Has anyone make any improvements to the cryptonight algo? Or does it still slow the whole computer down? I would love to mine this but make the computer unusable. thx
Posted from Bitcointa.lk - #ffEIUBMaa2IUxu5Z
DemosMirak
Full Member
***
Offline Offline

Activity: 146
Merit: 100


View Profile
July 04, 2014, 09:20:51 PM
 #17271

Attached is nvMiner or otherwise known as ccminer 1.2U-a (U=unified)

I renamed it from ccminer to nvminer to make it clearer if it's a Christian release or from 3rd party.

This includes the following algos (unified from multiple devs):
heavy
mjollnir
fugue256
groestl
myr-gr
dmd-gr
jackpot
quark
anime
qubit
nist5
cryptonight
x11
x13
x14
x15

Also includes a few subtle changes and a couple of speedups to some routines.

https://ayarscloud.tonidoid.com/urljfz5fy

Have fun,
Carlo

Nice, starting it up remotely on my rigs at home now.

Edit: Perhaps add donation adresses for Cbuchner, tsiv, djm and the other contributors, along with what they contributed. Also mention pooler (and maybe his donation address), as his miner was the basis for this one, I seem to remember.

BTC: 13enECLM3M3gjQDoBKouXuYFG4zXaDdDPx
LTC: LRTbQNQcRjZV51PivQdhK7zpMtJYPouqR9
dotvibe
Sr. Member
****
Offline Offline

Activity: 304
Merit: 250



View Profile
July 04, 2014, 10:17:34 PM
 #17272

anyone actually compare CUDA 5.5 to CUDA 6.0 compiles? see if there really is a speed difference?
cayars
Full Member
***
Offline Offline

Activity: 168
Merit: 100


View Profile
July 04, 2014, 10:31:55 PM
 #17273

That's really useful for setting up my auto-switcher.  It was a pain in the butt before to gather a bunch of the numbers manually and average. With this reporting all I have to do is let the miner run for a few minutes and take the last reported number.  Thanks a lot to everyone who contributed code which went into this release.

I've tested this against x11, x13, x15, and Nist5 on NiceHash and had shared accepted for all four.  Also seem to have a (slight) speed bump for all of them but that could be the result of bad estimating on my part for all but x15 which we know is better now.

Now that there are several people making meaningful contributions, I hope an effort will be made to setup a shared (but moderated) repository to allow code submissions from multiple people and new people.  BTW, I wouldn't be upset to see the splitscreen code make it in too if it can be isolated in a way that won't break Linux builds.
I thought about this but didn't for exactly the reason you mentioned.
Quote
I know there is not a lot of interest in some of these algorithms these days, but it would be nice to bring the algorithms over from cudaMiner into nvminer (or ccminer) so we can have one code base to mine them all.

Good work all!

I have never looked at the code for CudaMiner.  Can anyone comment how hard this will be to do?  I have a feeling it's not all that easy or Chris would have probably done it by now.

Has anyone make any improvements to the cryptonight algo? Or does it still slow the whole computer down? I would love to mine this but make the computer unusable. thx
Posted from Bitcointa.lk - #ffEIUBMaa2IUxu5Z

I'm working on this right now and will have a "B" version up that may help a bit for CryptoNight (not sure yet). Need to test on Kepler yet as well as more on Maxwell.  I'm new to CUDA and don't really know the architecture yet but from what I do know (unless I'm totally off base) the CryptoNight algo aren't optimized for matching the hardware (threads used, block sizes, etc).  I'm playing. Smiley

Nice, starting it up remotely on my rigs at home now.

Edit: Perhaps add donation adresses for Cbuchner, tsiv, djm and the other contributors, along with what they contributed. Also mention pooler (and maybe his donation address), as his miner was the basis for this one, I seem to remember.

I'm going to add a new screen similar to the help screen itself with this info along with what each dev contributed. I'm going to PM each dev for a few different coin donation addresses for this page.  This way it will be clear what coin address belongs to who.  Right now I'm not sure what coin address belongs to each of them.

BTW, if you look at the help screen much of what was on the startup is now there plus a link back to this forum.
RavenXBR
Full Member
***
Offline Offline

Activity: 140
Merit: 100


View Profile
July 04, 2014, 11:26:18 PM
 #17274

I have updated github with a new version of the whirlpool algo (x15)
It compiles much faster and it is slightly faster (got rid of make_ulonglong  Smiley)
also no more "don't validate on cpu"


750ti: 1.6MHash/s (before 1.4MHash/s
780ti: 3.6MHash/s (2.9MHash/s from the github release or 3.4MHash/s from an exe I put here)

https://github.com/djm34/ccminer

Sweet!

Compiled version?

As usual, here:
http://cryptomining-blog.com/2991-updated-ccminer-fork-with-x15-algorithm-support-now-available/

From 1.3M to 1.5M

Thx to djm34...  Wink
djm34
Legendary
*
Offline Offline

Activity: 1400
Merit: 1050


View Profile WWW
July 04, 2014, 11:36:33 PM
 #17275

I have updated github with a new version of the whirlpool algo (x15)
It compiles much faster and it is slightly faster (got rid of make_ulonglong  Smiley)
also no more "don't validate on cpu"


750ti: 1.6MHash/s (before 1.4MHash/s
780ti: 3.6MHash/s (2.9MHash/s from the github release or 3.4MHash/s from an exe I put here)

https://github.com/djm34/ccminer

Sweet!

Compiled version?

As usual, here:
http://cryptomining-blog.com/2991-updated-ccminer-fork-with-x15-algorithm-support-now-available/

From 1.3M to 1.5M

Thx to djm34...  Wink
you welcome.
Why would I bother compiling anything any more ?  Grin
(in the article they say around 3MHhash/s for the 780ti, it is rather around 3.5~3.6MHash/s (with potentially 3.7, if I can find a way to keep the gpu usage at 98~99%)

djm34 facebook page
BTC: 1NENYmxwZGHsKFmyjTc5WferTn5VTFb7Ze
Pledge for neoscrypt ccminer to that address: 16UoC4DmTz2pvhFvcfTQrzkPTrXkWijzXw
cayars
Full Member
***
Offline Offline

Activity: 168
Merit: 100


View Profile
July 05, 2014, 12:34:57 AM
 #17276

Attached is nvMiner or otherwise known as ccminer 1.2U-B (U=unified)

Same as the last version but with possible improvements to CryptoNight
https://ayarscloud.tonidoid.com/urljfz5fy

If you run CryptoNight can you try this version with and without your usual -l and let me know what hash speeds you get?
Also what cards you have?

Have fun,
Carlo
Equitum
Newbie
*
Offline Offline

Activity: 29
Merit: 0


View Profile
July 05, 2014, 12:55:57 AM
 #17277

Attached is nvMiner or otherwise known as ccminer 1.2U-B (U=unified)

Same as the last version but with possible improvements to CryptoNight
https://ayarscloud.tonidoid.com/urljfz5fy

If you run CryptoNight can you try this version with and without your usual -l and let me know what hash speeds you get?
Also what cards you have?

Have fun,
Carlo

Thanks for putting this all together in one package!

For CryptoNight without the launch config, nvminer gave me 64 blocks of 8 thread (8x64), and gave me about 385 h/s on my 780 Ti Classified. -l 4x120 gives me 475 h/s, for reference.
tbearhere
Legendary
*
Offline Offline

Activity: 3164
Merit: 1003



View Profile
July 05, 2014, 01:11:55 AM
 #17278

Be patient there will be more opportunities. Right now I cant complain I made ROI with the JPC and MIN. Lets start pilling some BTC for those 880. Tongue

how many kh/s in scrypt do you think it will do?
djm34
Legendary
*
Offline Offline

Activity: 1400
Merit: 1050


View Profile WWW
July 05, 2014, 01:28:15 AM
 #17279

Be patient there will be more opportunities. Right now I cant complain I made ROI with the JPC and MIN. Lets start pilling some BTC for those 880. Tongue

how many kh/s in scrypt do you think it will do?
not enough for its power usage compared to asic.
based on the 750ti, it should do around 1.5MHash/s

djm34 facebook page
BTC: 1NENYmxwZGHsKFmyjTc5WferTn5VTFb7Ze
Pledge for neoscrypt ccminer to that address: 16UoC4DmTz2pvhFvcfTQrzkPTrXkWijzXw
tbearhere
Legendary
*
Offline Offline

Activity: 3164
Merit: 1003



View Profile
July 05, 2014, 01:56:07 AM
 #17280

Be patient there will be more opportunities. Right now I cant complain I made ROI with the JPC and MIN. Lets start pilling some BTC for those 880. Tongue

how many kh/s in scrypt do you think it will do?
not enough for its power usage compared to asic.
based on the 750ti, it should do around 1.5MHash/s

That would be great on a 6 card rig with X11 ect.  Grin
Pages: « 1 ... 814 815 816 817 818 819 820 821 822 823 824 825 826 827 828 829 830 831 832 833 834 835 836 837 838 839 840 841 842 843 844 845 846 847 848 849 850 851 852 853 854 855 856 857 858 859 860 861 862 863 [864] 865 866 867 868 869 870 871 872 873 874 875 876 877 878 879 880 881 882 883 884 885 886 887 888 889 890 891 892 893 894 895 896 897 898 899 900 901 902 903 904 905 906 907 908 909 910 911 912 913 914 ... 1135 »
  Print  
 
Jump to:  

Powered by MySQL Powered by PHP Powered by SMF 1.1.19 | SMF © 2006-2009, Simple Machines Valid XHTML 1.0! Valid CSS!