XPlotter for optimized plots (CPU)
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@vile looks fine, your drive connected to USB2 or USB3 ?
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@vile it s your drive. The Seagate backup plus is one of those SMR drives I believe. I have a few of them and while they are having fine read speed, write is SLOooooW... it will take a while to plot it...
see more about it in this thread
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I have fixed the problem by reading earlier in the thread and formatting my drive to 64kb allocation. Thanks guys everything running the way it shoudl now.
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OK ppl I finally got the RAM usage to be where I want it to be.
Now how do you recover an incomplete plot from xplotter because it crashed on me twice while plotting a 5TB drive and this would have saved me so much time instead of starting the plotting from scratch
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@socal when you restart the "RunThisAsAdmin.bat" with XPlotter v1.0 all you need to do is put in the number of nonces that are in your file name instead of 0 for the -n parameter. If you didn't use the -n 0 parameter to initially fill your drive and have already explicitly gave it a value for the number of nonces, you should just be able to rerun the .bat file.
the -n 0 parameter just fills the drive, so the number of nonces aren't exactly known until the plotter calculates them based on the space available and a few other things. So if you have to restart a plot that you made using -n 0, you would need to go to the plot's file name and figure out how many nonces were calculated then use that instead of 0. Hope that made sense...
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@k.coins thanks bud I got what you were saying
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~18.5k nonces/min on i7-5930k @4ghz with 16gb RAM usage. :D
Not too shabby?
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@IncludeBeer that is astronomical! compared to my nonce/min (6k/min with i7 2ghz) lol!
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@k.coins said in XPlotter for optimized plots (CPU):
@IncludeBeer that is astronomical! compared to my nonce/min (6k/min with i7 2ghz) lol!
haha, that's almost double what I get on my $350 Dell laptop, Intel i5-5200U at 2.2 GHz 4 core using 1 GB of RAM.
I'll bet @IncludeBeer is going to have to hit about 2000 extra blocks to make up the cash difference between my laptop and that beast of a miner he has :)
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@rds said in XPlotter for optimized plots (CPU):
@k.coins said in XPlotter for optimized plots (CPU):
@IncludeBeer that is astronomical! compared to my nonce/min (6k/min with i7 2ghz) lol!
haha, that's almost double what I get on my $350 Dell laptop, Intel i5-5200U at 2.2 GHz 4 core using 1 GB of RAM.
I'll bet @IncludeBeer is going to have to hit about 2000 extra blocks to make up the cash difference between my laptop and that beast of a miner he has :)
lol ya exactly! I built this puppy about 2 years ago now to be my gaming machine. But, since it can handle it easily, I shoved in a couple extra gpu's for mining and also run my burst mining from it since it can house so many hdd's. It makes for a great plotter for sure, but certainly wasn't built for it ( e.g. $/efficiency).
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Is it safe to run multiple instances of xplotter?
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@IncludeBeer I think it would be limited by the number of threads devoted to each.
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@IncludeBeer are you doing three at the same time? If so it looks good.
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@IncludeBeer so basically if I had 8 cores I would use 4 and 4 and divide the available RAM in two as well in order to run two instances at the same time. I have never tried this but I would assume that the plotting speed will be divided by two as well, so it will be probably the same speed after all if using the 8 cores and available RAM to do one plot alone.
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@vExact Yep, running 3 instances to plot 3 drives. You're generally right: it seems like a clean split (4 core plotting is ~1/2 the speed as 8 core plotting). But with my OC'd 17-5930k (12 threads), and 32gb of ddr4, my hard drives quickly become the bottleneck in the plotting process. Even by splitting my compute power over 3 instances (not evenly, btw, as can be seen in the pic), my cpu still isn't working at 100%, 100% of the time. So for me, this is freaking awesome!
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@IncludeBeer thanks for the note. I will try that as well for my new plots next time :)
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I run two instances. I have a 4 core laptop and run each instance as 4 threads and 1GB RAM. My max Nonce/min is around 3900. That is split between the two instances. My drives are what reduces my actual nonce/min below my max, but I've seen that most of the time if on instance is gray the other is yellow. As long as one is yellow, you are putting out max available.
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@rds and does this not saturate CPU operation for you?

