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Thread Status: Active Total posts in this thread: 13
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Former Member
Cruncher Joined: May 22, 2018 Post Count: 0 Status: Offline |
I have been running BOINC on four Ubuntu Linux (free download) systems for over a year and have had no problems whatever. Also run BOINC on four Windows systems with no problems, but one OEM copy of WinXP Pro costs over $100. Another consideration - Ubuntu Linux has numerous updates which must be manually downloaded and installed on each machine. Can be a weekly chore with numerous machines. However, if Ubuntu updates are ignored, BOINC performance isn't affected in my experience. Of course, Windows has a good automated update system requiring almost no attention. I can't factually address the relative speed between Linux and Windows, as I have no data nor statistics. All of my systems have different CPU's, RAM, and Mobo's.
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Bearcat
Master Cruncher USA Joined: Jan 6, 2007 Post Count: 2803 Status: Offline Project Badges:
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Here is a web site that clusters mac mini's... http://www.macminicolo.net/
----------------------------------------Nice clean setup but a bit more than a do-it-yourself. You could buy a bare bones mini and upgrade the ram yourself. Thought about doing something like this myself as my old mini was crunching about the same as my mac pro using 2 cores.
Crunching for humanity since 2007!
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XS_olympic
Cruncher Joined: Sep 20, 2007 Post Count: 19 Status: Offline |
I've built several machines solely for the purpose of running BOINC WCG and here's my harware "requirements".
CPU: Intel Q6600. Best bang for the $$$ CPU there is and has been seen selling for as little as $200. It can crunch 4 work units at once and can be overclocked nicely if you want to do that. RAM: 256MB per core is enough, ie-1GB on a quad core. A name brand 1GB stick of PC2-5300 can be bought for under $20 these days. Just use a small OS such as Linux or Windows Server 2003 and you'll easily have 850MB left over for BOINC to use. Motherboard: Don't go too cheap here! My personal favorite is the Gigabyte P35 DS3L. It's a solid board and overclocks nicely. Just beware of the CPU voltage droop and adding a few RAMsinks to the mosfets helps keep them cool. cooling: stock cooling for stock speed, high end air or water cooling for overclocking. power supply: No need for anything fancy here but don't cheap out either. I use the Sparkle Power 400w PSU, it can be bought for around $35. Rock solid and reliable. graphics: there's no need for a graphics card. Most motherboards will boot without one. I keep an ancient PCI video card around for setting up new computers and for the occasional time I need to access the BIOS. Outside of that everything else can be done via BOINCview or Remote Desktop. Operating system: free is always best so Linux is probably your best option. I really don't know if Windows or Linux is better for crunching but I doubt there is a large difference. Personally I use Windows Server 2003 x64. Hard drive: anything will do, even an ancient 10GB drive. Often you can buy large lots of outdated drives on eBay for a few dollars. The only downside is older drives tend to be noisy. networking: buy a cheap network switch. Plug all your crunchers into that and then plug the switch into your router. |
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