Author

Topic: Any interest in an automated tool to find better GPU miner settings? (Read 937 times)

hero member
Activity: 914
Merit: 500
I'm not sure if automated is the best answer, but I think that people posting their settings/results clearly and easily searchable would be nice.

An example of this NOT happening is on the litecoin wiki where it ranks GPU performance, and the settings sometimes are like "aggression 18". Where's the # of CU's? Where's the # of threads? This doesn't help me at all!
sr. member
Activity: 341
Merit: 250
yeah a feature in cgminer to find optimum settings for video cards would be awesome.  I know in my guts that cgminer can mine more effieciently than reaper but i haven't figured out how to do it (i use a pool to find the true khash, bc reaper reports funny)
member
Activity: 98
Merit: 10
Here's my vote for cgminer as well. Besides the initial launch day, I got my cgminer settings close and just left them. What would really be good is in the end a database could be sorted out for this. Take your driver/opencl/card combo and find a close match in the DB. Then tweak the settings around a bit. Once it found the fastest, it would upload the data.

The benchmarked data should be uploaded to public and everyone can view important data : temperature, overclocking precentage, effieciency, hash rate and others.

Someone should set up CGMiner.com-like domain to hold all this data.
sr. member
Activity: 413
Merit: 250
Here's my vote for cgminer as well. Besides the initial launch day, I got my cgminer settings close and just left them. What would really be good is in the end a database could be sorted out for this. Take your driver/opencl/card combo and find a close match in the DB. Then tweak the settings around a bit. Once it found the fastest, it would upload the data.
newbie
Activity: 22
Merit: 0
CGMINER.

See if you can help there.

Sure, if there's interest and somebody's not already working on full auto-configuration in cgminer.  That's mainly what I was looking to find out--I don't want to spend a bunch of time hacking on miner code if everybody already knows how to find optimal settings for their setup.

Reaper is useful for those who can't get cgminer to work right.
I've personally found it quite useful for locking up my machine. Smiley
full member
Activity: 182
Merit: 100
I was playing with the reaper code, mostly just pulling it apart to get an idea of how it worked, and I thought it would be useful to hack it up to run through a range of scrypt GPU settings and measure the performance so I don't have to slog through it manually.  It seems like the "stab in the dark" settings I was previously using for my NVIDIA cards were way off base, because I've easily picked up another 50% hash rate by using settings found with my hacked miner.

If anybody else wants to try it out, I can post the (still extremely ugly) source and some Windows binaries on Github this weekend.  Right now I've only run this on NVIDIA cards, but I'll pop an ATI card in my machine and make sure that works before I post it.  I'm not sure I'll get around to making sure Linux works before I post, but I can do that later on this week.

I don't plan on spending a lot of time polishing this thing, as I'd still prefer to work on things that would be more useful for making LTC adoption easier (assuming I can learn the things I need in order to do that effectively), but I did want to throw this out there if it seems like it would save people some time.

CGMINER.

See if you can help there.

Reaper is useful for those who can't get cgminer to work right.
newbie
Activity: 22
Merit: 0
I was playing with the reaper code, mostly just pulling it apart to get an idea of how it worked, and I thought it would be useful to hack it up to run through a range of scrypt GPU settings and measure the performance so I don't have to slog through it manually.  It seems like the "stab in the dark" settings I was previously using for my NVIDIA cards were way off base, because I've easily picked up another 50% hash rate by using settings found with my hacked miner.

If anybody else wants to try it out, I can post the (still extremely ugly) source and some Windows binaries on Github this weekend.  Right now I've only run this on NVIDIA cards, but I'll pop an ATI card in my machine and make sure that works before I post it.  I'm not sure I'll get around to making sure Linux works before I post, but I can do that later on this week.

I don't plan on spending a lot of time polishing this thing, as I'd still prefer to work on things that would be more useful for making LTC adoption easier (assuming I can learn the things I need in order to do that effectively), but I did want to throw this out there if it seems like it would save people some time.
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