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Topic: Cgminer vs Guiminer (Read 3282 times)

member
Activity: 99
Merit: 10
June 16, 2013, 09:06:51 AM
#23
I can, but the Mh/s rate is then all over the board. I get 20-30 Mh/s swings with the intensities that high. If that's okay, then I'll leave it alone. I dropped the 5870 from 1000 clock to 995. I'll give it a few hours to see if I get an HW errors. Thanks again for all of the help Sam.

legendary
Activity: 3583
Merit: 1094
Think for yourself
June 16, 2013, 08:56:28 AM
#22
Set Powertune to a lower level, this helps to run more stable.

Powertune is set to zero on all four cards. I don't think the 5xxx and 6xxx GPUs have the powertune option.

Sam, it's been running for about 12 hours now without a hiccup, so I think it will be okay for now. I am getting some HW errors on GPU3. None on the rest. Should I be worried?



In my experience HW: errors eventually lead to system destabilization so I would lower the clocks by 5Mhz increments until the stop.  If your temp on that GPU is OK, around 75c or whatever your temp target is it should be OK though.

But I'm still baffled as to why you can't raise intensity to 8 or 9 on the none display GPU's.
member
Activity: 99
Merit: 10
June 16, 2013, 08:31:53 AM
#21
Set Powertune to a lower level, this helps to run more stable.

Powertune is set to zero on all four cards. I don't think the 5xxx and 6xxx GPUs have the powertune option.

Sam, it's been running for about 12 hours now without a hiccup, so I think it will be okay for now. I am getting some HW errors on GPU3. None on the rest. Should I be worried?

legendary
Activity: 3583
Merit: 1094
Think for yourself
June 16, 2013, 07:19:25 AM
#20
I'm running all of this from a EVGA 750w power supply.

4 GPU's on a 750W P/S may be too much for it.  Maybe someone can chime in on that who has had that many GPU's.  I was running two 5xxx GPU's on a 600W and that seemed OK.

Sam
full member
Activity: 140
Merit: 100
In POS we trust
June 16, 2013, 01:17:34 AM
#19
Set Powertune to a lower level, this helps to run more stable.
member
Activity: 99
Merit: 10
June 15, 2013, 10:13:25 PM
#18
It seemed like it, but turned out I had one of the cards overclocked too much. Brought the 6870 down a bit and now it's stable. Raised the intensity levels to 6, 5, 5, 7 respectively and that seems to be the sweet spot. Higher levels start to cause rejected shares and HW errors. I'm running all of this from a EVGA 750w power supply. The fan on the power supply is screaming. Thanks for the help Sam.
legendary
Activity: 3583
Merit: 1094
Think for yourself
June 15, 2013, 07:55:54 PM
#17
Here's a screenshot:
GPU0=6870
GPU1=6850
GPU2=6850
GPU3=5870



So are you saying that if you set your intensity higher than 5 or 6 it crash's?

Your hash rates for each GPU seem to be OK.  According to the hardware comparison chart you could probably do a little better.
Sam

https://en.bitcoin.it/wiki/Mining_hardware_comparison
legendary
Activity: 3583
Merit: 1094
Think for yourself
June 15, 2013, 07:49:46 PM
#16
Ok, been playing with CGminer for hours now and I think this is the best I'm going to do, which is about 100 MH/s more than with GUIminer. The driver starts crashing if I raise the intensity above these values. As it is, I'm getting an occasional HW error on GPU3. Are you supposed to set the intensity first and then adjust your clock speeds or vice verse? I initially left the intensity on dynamic, adjusted the clock speeds, and then increased the intensity until the driver crashed.


I would raise the engine clock until it crash's and then back it off.  Intensity is usually fairly static at 8 or 9.  I would use 8 on 5xxx cards and 9 on 6xxx cards.  Dynamic is for use with the GPU that is running the display so that it can adjust intensity on the fly according to how much GUI interaction you need.  I definitely would not go over intensity of 9 on 5xxx or 10 on 6xxx cards

I adjusted my clocks till I didn't get any hardware error's.

Sam
member
Activity: 99
Merit: 10
June 15, 2013, 07:47:58 PM
#15
Here's a screenshot:
GPU0=6870
GPU1=6850
GPU2=6850
GPU3=5870

member
Activity: 99
Merit: 10
June 15, 2013, 07:44:09 PM
#14
Ok, been playing with CGminer for hours now and I think this is the best I'm going to do, which is about 100 MH/s more than with GUIminer. The driver starts crashing if I raise the intensity above these values. As it is, I'm getting an occasional HW error on GPU3. Are you supposed to set the intensity first and then adjust your clock speeds or vice verse? I initially left the intensity on dynamic, adjusted the clock speeds, and then increased the intensity until the driver crashed.
legendary
Activity: 3583
Merit: 1094
Think for yourself
June 15, 2013, 06:59:24 PM
#13
Sorry os2sam, didn't mean to come across that way. Everybody recommends CGminer over GUIminer, so it's something I'm doing wrong. In using the command line, do you type everything in each time? I see there is  a way of creating a .bat file. Is that what you're doing.

Yep, I'm using a .bat file.

Nothing to apologize for, I wasn't sure if you were adding stuff to the .conf file or if it generated it itself.  Now I know it generated the extra stuff itself.  Still seems like allot of extra stuff though.  Others .conf file that people have posted don't seem to have that many settings.

If your driver and SDK combo is good for GUIMiner it should be good for CGMiner too.  You shouldn't need to change anything with your driver or OpenCL SDK.

I would increase your intensity to 9 or so and enable auto-gpu.
Sam
member
Activity: 99
Merit: 10
June 15, 2013, 03:21:20 PM
#12
Sorry os2sam, didn't mean to come across that way. Everybody recommends CGminer over GUIminer, so it's something I'm doing wrong. In using the command line, do you type everything in each time? I see there is  a way of creating a .bat file. Is that what you're doing.
legendary
Activity: 3583
Merit: 1094
Think for yourself
June 15, 2013, 01:59:10 PM
#11
os2sam, didn't even realize that I'm micromanaging. In researching how to us CGMiner I was told to use the config file versus the command line. So, all I did was start CGminer up and write the config file. I only changed a few settings. I'll remove the ones you suggested.

I'm back to using 11.11 and sdk 2.5 with GUIminer and everything is working great. I just don't see the advantage to CGminer, at least not yet.

My point was that I don't know what all is in or required in a .conf file.  I just add the settings that I need in a command line.  It seems to me that the .conf files have gotten a bit bloated and difficult to know what does and doesn't need to be set.  I'll stick with my simple command line.

I don't know nothing about guiminer as I have never used it.  All I know is that there are things that only CGMiner would do such as overclocking the engine, underclocking the memory and managing temperature that I was unable to do with other miner and software configurations.

But hey, use whatever works good for you.

Good Luck,
Sam
member
Activity: 99
Merit: 10
June 15, 2013, 01:51:35 PM
#10
os2sam, didn't even realize that I'm micromanaging. In researching how to us CGMiner I was told to use the config file versus the command line. So, all I did was start CGminer up and write the config file. I only changed a few settings. I'll remove the ones you suggested.

I'm back to using 11.11 and sdk 2.5 with GUIminer and everything is working great. I just don't see the advantage to CGminer, at least not yet.
legendary
Activity: 3583
Merit: 1094
Think for yourself
June 15, 2013, 12:16:20 PM
#9
your intensity is kinda low. i know some people running at intensity 20....

That's probably for scrypt mining NOT Bitcoin.  Generally 8 or 9 is as high as you want to go for Bitcoin with 5 and 6xxx GPU's.  But trial and error is always recommended to get the best for your particular GPU as each is a bit different.
full member
Activity: 224
Merit: 100
June 15, 2013, 10:59:35 AM
#8
i use cgminer because it drasticaly reduces the temp at which my cards run.

with 50miner my cards ran at 85°C now they run at 65°C

i also had an increase from 390Mhs to 430 from one of my cards.


your intensity is kinda low. i know some people running at intensity 20....
legendary
Activity: 3583
Merit: 1094
Think for yourself
June 15, 2013, 10:16:46 AM
#7
I'm not having much success with CGminer.

"intensity" : "5,d,5",
"vectors" : "2,2,2",
"worksize" : "128,128,128",
"kernel" : "phatk,phatk,phatk",

I don't use the .conf file as I prefer using command line options.  But is seems you have way more stuff in there than you need.  Let CGMiner do it's thing and quit trying to micro manage it.

Your intensity is too low.  Set it to 8 or 9 for GPU's not driving monitors and keep the one driving your monitor set to dynamic like you have it.

Let CGMiner select the vectors, worksize and kernel so remove those from your file altogether, I think.

Enable auto-gpu and enter a range for your engine clocks starting at 600Mhz or so to your Max Overclock speed.
Sam
member
Activity: 99
Merit: 10
June 15, 2013, 09:45:50 AM
#6
GPU0 = 6870
GPU1 = 6850 connected to monitor
GPU2 = 5870
member
Activity: 99
Merit: 10
June 15, 2013, 09:44:35 AM
#5
I'm not having much success with CGminer. With GUIminer I was getting the following

5870: 415 MH/s
6870: 305 MH/s
6850: 250 MH/s

That was with driver 11.11 and SDK 2.5. With those same drivers and CGminer with the following config file I was getting slightly better performance, but the driver kept crashing. I tried lowering the intensity, but still no luck. So, then I tried installing 11.12 and 11.6 and both of those were worse. Any suggestions? What's the best driver/sdk for a mixture of 58xx's and 68xx's? Thanks.

"intensity" : "5,d,5",
"vectors" : "2,2,2",
"worksize" : "128,128,128",
"kernel" : "phatk,phatk,phatk",
"lookup-gap" : "0,0,0",
"thread-concurrency" : "0,0,0",
"shaders" : "0,0,0",
"gpu-engine" : "975,945,925",
"auto-fan" : true,
"gpu-fan" : "0-85,0-85,0-85",
"gpu-memclock" : "300",
"gpu-memdiff" : "0,0,0",
"gpu-powertune" : "20,20,20",
"gpu-vddc" : "0.000,0.000,0.000",
"temp-cutoff" : "95",
"temp-overheat" : "90",
"temp-target" : "85",
"api-port" : "4028",
"expiry" : "120",
"gpu-dyninterval" : "7",
"gpu-platform" : "0",
"gpu-threads" : "2",
"hotplug" : "5",
"log" : "5",
"no-pool-disable" : true,
"queue" : "1",
"scan-time" : "60",
"temp-hysteresis" : "3",
"shares" : "0",
"kernel-path" : "/usr/local/bin"
}
newbie
Activity: 44
Merit: 0
June 13, 2013, 11:41:35 PM
#4
Guiminer has some problems:
- You can't tune you card to the maximum hashrate like you can do with cgminer or bfgminer

This is the biggest difference I noticed. With some of the parameter tweaking I was able to do with bfgminer I noticed a 20% hashrate increase from GUIMiner. I would not recommend using GUIMiner to anyone.
member
Activity: 99
Merit: 10
June 13, 2013, 10:33:12 PM
#3
Thanks. I'll take the time to figure it out this weekend.
full member
Activity: 140
Merit: 100
In POS we trust
June 13, 2013, 07:17:53 AM
#2
Guiminer has some problems:
- After some time the hashrate often falls down to some kHash/s, not going back to normal MHash/s hashrate
- You can't tune you card to the maximum hashrate like you can do with cgminer or bfgminer
- You need for every card a worker
- You can't do load balancing, which means with this high difficulty it is possible that a pool has to chew a long time to solve a block. With load balancing you can mine on two or more pools and your daily income is higher (Example: Pool 1 is unlucky and chewing on a big block, but pool 2 is lucky with short blocks and pays you for solved blocks).
member
Activity: 99
Merit: 10
June 12, 2013, 09:57:46 PM
#1
Noob here. Been using GUIminer for the last couple of months and I'm wondering if there is a benefit of going to CGminer? Thanks.
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