phelix (OP)
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August 19, 2011, 07:57:47 AM |
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Bitcoin is by far the fastest distributed computing network in the world. In this post we have started to claim that record at Guinness: https://bitcointalk.org/index.php?topic=29722For the entry it is necessary for an expert to attest to the network speed. Still, I think it might speed things up if we would discuss the proper way for such an estimate here before. Got news from Guinnes world records:
MOST POWERFUL DISTRIBUTED COMPUTING NETWORK DEFINITION OF RECORD This is for the most powerful distributed computing network. It must be measured in petaFLOPS and floating point operations per second.
GUIDELINES FOR ‘MOST POWERFUL DISTRIBUTED COMPUTING NETWORK’ 1. For the purposes of this record, a distributed computing network consist of clients and servers connected in such a way that any system can potentially communicate with any other system.
2. The capacity of the distributed computing network must be tested using appropriate means.
3. The exact measurements of the distributed computing network must be given in petaFLOPS and floating point operations per second.
[...]
I am aware we are not actually doing any FLOPS so we have to figure something out here to still make it work. people have already thought about this a while ago: http://bitcointalk.org/index.php?topic=4689.0 but we need to bring it all into order and make it possible to verify/validate everything. What about this attempt: (please correct me, my knowledge of the bitcoin network guts is still quite limited) Assumption: SHA256 is fine 10) The network finds the solution to a specific SHA256 Problem (depending on difficulty) The solution pops up in the blockchain20) It takes n hashes to solve such a problem on average SHA256 picture book???30) Problems (blocks) are solved at speed s Blocks pop up at speed s40) --> over a certain period of time t the network has to try m hashes 50) It takes i integer operations for a single hash Kernel Analyzer?60) --> over t there have to be i integer operations done in the network 70) For some strange reasons (muladd???) we can say that one 32bit INTOP is two 16bit FLOPS ??
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Gabi
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August 19, 2011, 09:10:04 AM |
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It must be measured in petaFLOPS and floating point operations per second. That's what happens when people who know NOTHING about computing make the rules...
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phelix (OP)
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August 29, 2011, 07:18:13 AM |
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It must be measured in petaFLOPS and floating point operations per second. That's what happens when people who know NOTHING about computing make the rules... we just have to work arround it... and use it to our advantage
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Gabi
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August 29, 2011, 12:50:40 PM |
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It's like the world record on sport and saying "sport record must be measured in goal made" (refering to soccer i mean). And then we have runners arguing that the first place is like 3 goal in a soccer match and so on.
Seriously, "It must be measured in petaFLOPS and floating point operations per second." is idiocy.
We make exactly 0 petaFLOPS
Ok, we have to work around it but how? You can't convert integer in flops operations...
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kjj
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August 29, 2011, 02:26:58 PM |
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They measure in FLOPS because that is what supercomputers do, and that is how supercomputers are measured.
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phelix (OP)
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August 29, 2011, 05:56:29 PM |
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[...]
We make exactly 0 petaFLOPS
Ok, we have to work around it but how? You can't convert integer in flops operations...
but mining GPUs could make petaFLOPS. From what I heard AMD says one 32bit INTOP is two 16bit FLOPS (see #70 above). I think Guinness will accept it if we can convince them that at least 75% of the bitcoin network consists of GPUs. Unfortunately there is no way to prove this, is there?
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kjj
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August 29, 2011, 06:12:27 PM |
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[...]
We make exactly 0 petaFLOPS
Ok, we have to work around it but how? You can't convert integer in flops operations...
but mining GPUs could make petaFLOPS. From what I heard AMD says one 32bit INTOP is two 16bit FLOPS (see #70 above). I think Guinness will accept it if we can convince them that at least 75% of the bitcoin network consists of GPUs. Unfortunately there is no way to prove this, is there? I'm pretty sure the Guinness people aren't interested in what we could do, but only in what we actually do do. The right approach would probably be to ask them to consider adding a category that we do fit into.
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wareen
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August 29, 2011, 06:14:46 PM |
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but mining GPUs could make petaFLOPS. From what I heard AMD says one 32bit INTOP is two 16bit FLOPS (see #70 above). I think Guinness will accept it if we can convince them that at least 75% of the bitcoin network consists of GPUs. Unfortunately there is no way to prove this, is there?
Unfortunately no - for all we know, 90% of the hashing power could come from Chuck Norris with his abacus... Of course you can argue indirectly: AMD GPUs are vastly superior in terms of Mhash/$ _and_ Mhash/W than anything else so that everybody not using it is most likely losing money on electricity (Nvidia/CPU) or on initial investments (ASIC/FPGA). I'd cite the mining hardware comparison on the wiki as reference.
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wareen
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August 29, 2011, 06:21:41 PM |
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I'm pretty sure the Guinness people aren't interested in what we could do, but only in what we actually do do. The right approach would probably be to ask them to consider adding a category that we do fit into.
Well, just because some theoretical supercomputer might usually work on integer problems doesn't make it less a supercomputer worthy of Guinness' attention. I'd say its the hardware that counts, not the software usually running on it. I think the proper way would be to explain the situation, give them the best estimates of the hardware (and a FLOPs value) we can come up with and let them decide what to do.
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kjj
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August 29, 2011, 06:34:12 PM |
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I'm pretty sure the Guinness people aren't interested in what we could do, but only in what we actually do do. The right approach would probably be to ask them to consider adding a category that we do fit into.
Well, just because some theoretical supercomputer might usually work on integer problems doesn't make it less a supercomputer worthy of Guinness' attention. I'd say its the hardware that counts, not the software usually running on it. I think the proper way would be to explain the situation, give them the best estimates of the hardware (and a FLOPs value) we can come up with and let them decide what to do. Just don't be disappointed. Floating point operations have been an implicit part of the definition of a supercomputer for like 45 years now.
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phelix (OP)
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August 29, 2011, 08:20:16 PM |
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I'm pretty sure the Guinness people aren't interested in what we could do, but only in what we actually do do. The right approach would probably be to ask them to consider adding a category that we do fit into.
Well, just because some theoretical supercomputer might usually work on integer problems doesn't make it less a supercomputer worthy of Guinness' attention. I'd say its the hardware that counts, not the software usually running on it. I think the proper way would be to explain the situation, give them the best estimates of the hardware (and a FLOPs value) we can come up with and let them decide what to do. +1 that's exactly how I see it. folding@home who currently own the title also mostly consist of the very same GPUs.
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phelix (OP)
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September 24, 2011, 09:43:18 AM |
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dishwara
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September 29, 2011, 11:39:14 AM |
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We have to send letter to Guinness that our bitcoin network has highest hash power in integer calculation & ask them to record it. Instead of just Network speed, we have to tell them that we have a new record which can be only calculated in integer, so divide the network speed record in to TWO categories one using FLOPS & other using INTEGER & ask them to record bitcoin network in INTEGER. If enough people ask Guinness, they will surely consider it.
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phelix (OP)
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September 29, 2011, 12:43:11 PM |
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We have to send letter to Guinness that our bitcoin network has highest hash power in integer calculation & ask them to record it. Instead of just Network speed, we have to tell them that we have a new record which can be only calculated in integer, so divide the network speed record in to TWO categories one using FLOPS & other using INTEGER & ask them to record bitcoin network in INTEGER. If enough people ask Guinness, they will surely consider it.
hmm maybe you are right. also we should just claim the record until someone can prove the opposite. it is pretty obvious to me that bitcoin is the fastest network. I will post a new calculation soon.
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phelix (OP)
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September 29, 2011, 01:06:15 PM Last edit: September 30, 2011, 06:34:10 PM by phelix |
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edit with new # of intops / hash (2011-09-30) from blockexplorer: 147282 64afcd14e7... 2011-09-28 19:06:58 93 8775.96044812 51.365 147263 145d985b3f... 2011-09-28 15:43:44 13 251.70410514 6.011 --> 19 new Blocks in 12194 Secs t ~= 641.79 secs / block (10.7 min) D = 1689334.404597 The expected number of hashes we need to calculate to find a block with difficulty D is [...] D * 2**48 / 0xffff ( https://en.bitcoin.it/wiki/Difficulty) = h = 7255746733660647.0 H = h / t --> Network Hashrate H ~= 11305484245096.756 Hashes / sec Int-Ops / Hash a = 3385 ALU OPs / Hash (for 5xxx architecture; 6xxx: 4220 ---> we go for a conservative value) ( https://bitcointalk.org/index.php?topic=7964.msg550288#msg550288) IntOps / Sec: i = a * H i = 38.2690641697 PetaIntOps / s For comparison: for Radeon Cards AMD says 1 32Bit-IntOp = 2 16Bit FLOPs (though it may only make limited Sense) f = i * 2 = 76.5381283393 PetaFLOPs/s off Bitcoinwatch by a factor of two because Bitcoinwatch uses a different number of INTOPs / hash (x86). Bitcoinwatch: Network Hashrate PetaFLOPs/s 153.06 Anyway still more than 18 times faster than folding@home, and also much faster than all the others like SETI, BOINC, etc. Hereby I declare BITCOIN the MOST POWERFUL DISTRIBUTED COMPUTING NETWORK on earth.
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BurtW
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September 29, 2011, 01:19:19 PM |
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This is exactly how bitcoinwatch estimates FLOPS. I am not saying it is an acurate way to do the estimate, all I am saying is this is how they do it for what it is worth and for comparison to your other methods. Many here among us question the valididty of this estimation method.
The page simply uses the following assumptions/estimates:
1 INTOP = 2 FLOP 1 hash = 6.35K INTOP 1 hash = 12.7K FLOP
So the hashrate in TeraFLOP/s is simply 12.7 times the hashrate in Gigahashes/s.
As an example: 11,558.55 Gigahashs/s * 12.7 TeraFLOP/Gigahash = 146,794 TeraFLOP/s = 146 PetaFLOP/s
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phelix (OP)
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September 29, 2011, 02:05:24 PM |
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This is exactly how bitcoinwatch estimates FLOPS. I am not saying it is an acurate way to do the estimate, all I am saying is this is how they do it for what it is worth and for comparison to your other methods. Many here among us question the valididty of this estimation method.
The page simply uses the following assumptions/estimates:
1 INTOP = 2 FLOP 1 hash = 6.35K INTOP 1 hash = 12.7K FLOP
So the hashrate in TeraFLOP/s is simply 12.7 times the hashrate in Gigahashes/s.
As an example: 11,558.55 Gigahashs/s * 12.7 TeraFLOP/Gigahash = 146,794 TeraFLOP/s = 146 PetaFLOP/s
yes, somebody said so in an older post (link above). 1 hash = 6.35K INTOP
this is too high in my opinion. ArtForz threw it into the ring for x86 INTOPs. luckily we are in the comfortable situation that however conservative we make the comparison we still are the fastest
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phelix (OP)
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September 30, 2011, 03:30:42 PM |
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#python script for you to play with
D = 1689334.404597 # difficulty t = 641.79 # time per block h = D* 2**48 / 0xffff # average hashes per block H = h / t # network hashes per sec print "network hashes/sec H:", H
a = 3385 # ALU OPs / Hash (more on 6xxx cards) i = a * H # INTOPs / sec print "network PetaINTOPs/sec:", i / 10**15
f = i * 2 # maybe 1.0 or 1.5 to be more conservative and make up for FPGAs print "network would-be PetaFLOPs/s (=voodoo):", f / 10**15
#output ##network hashes/sec H: 1.13054842451e+13 ##network PetaINTOPs/sec: 38.2690641697 ##network would-be PetaFLOPs/s (=voodoo): 76.5381283393
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maaku
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September 30, 2011, 05:12:06 PM |
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I'm not sure why there has to be voodoo involved. Most of the bitcoin network is GPU-based (at the moment). Modern GPUs can perform true floating-point operations. So get the most popular GPUs in use, get their IOPS and FLOPS ratings, and use the median ratio for calculating the Guinnes world record value.
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