Quote Originally Posted by Grinchy View Post
You should rename this thread, since 20 runs with Lynx is not stable by any mean!!Just read the readme included with the installation programand you will see that to call a system really Lynx stable you need at least 50-100 runs.In my experience it has to be more than 250 since i had crashes up to 243 run.Cheers
You should also post requirements for sr-2 users.If you set all the ram it will become unbareably slow since (it is my guess) every core will try to use the memory of the other cpu which is a way slower access than to his own memory bank. Secondly with sr-2 setups using 16(for double quad corexeon) or 24threads(for double exacore) is not a good stability check since in this way every thread is confined to a single core and you don't test the stability of the qpi between the cpus.Hence 32 threads testing is required since in this way you have threds jumping from one core to the other and from one cpu to the other and in this way you can test also the qpi between cpus.
Thirdly you should use your chipset connected devices to check if chipset too is "Lynx stable".For example QPI crapping after 7000 GT/s does not show up very evidently in Lynx testing if you don't play an audio sample and listen with your ears if there are stutters n the audio while for example testing lynx and listening to an audio file( i suggest clean audio samples like classical music since in this way you will be able to spot even the smallest stutters in the audio due to qpi crapping.Cheers and happy stability session to everybody
Agree with C-N, it's just a hurdle to jump over with our machines, and it's fun. More than 20 is just getting silly as Leeg said, but 20 is hard enough to make this a fun challenge not everyone can manage.