Odd behavior of POEM@Home?

Message boards : Questions and problems : Odd behavior of POEM@Home?
Message board moderation

To post messages, you must log in.

AuthorMessage
David

Send message
Joined: 12 Nov 12
Posts: 2
United States
Message 46250 - Posted: 12 Nov 2012, 15:51:20 UTC

Apologies if this isn't the right place to ask this -- I didn't see POEM@Home as having a dedicated forum.

I run BOINC on my desktop with ten projects -- ABC@Home, Rosetta@Home, POEM@Home, climateprediction.net, Docking, LHC@Home, Milkyway@Home, SETI@Home, FreeHAL@Home, and malariacontrol.net. POEM@Home, though, does something odd. Basically, if I have GPU computation enabled, POEM@Home always runs -- if I have it disabled, it never runs.

I've got an i5-3570K, so at any time I've got four tasks running, but if I have GPU computation enabled, POEM always takes two of those tasks. If I have GPU computation disabled, POEM never runs at all.

Ideally, I'd like POEM to share the available resources normally with everything else instead of always taking two slots, but as it is currently it seems my only options are to have it always running or never running. Any suggestions?
ID: 46250 · Report as offensive
Richard Haselgrove
Volunteer tester
Help desk expert

Send message
Joined: 5 Oct 06
Posts: 5082
United Kingdom
Message 46251 - Posted: 12 Nov 2012, 16:25:15 UTC - in response to Message 46250.  

POEM seems to have the normal message board structure at http://boinc.fzk.de/poem/forum_index.php.
ID: 46251 · Report as offensive
David

Send message
Joined: 12 Nov 12
Posts: 2
United States
Message 46278 - Posted: 14 Nov 2012, 19:02:20 UTC

Ah, gotcha. Asked there, but they don't seem to know why the BOINC manager behaves this way, and they don't think they have any control over this. Any tips from this side?
ID: 46278 · Report as offensive

Message boards : Questions and problems : Odd behavior of POEM@Home?

Copyright © 2024 University of California.
Permission is granted to copy, distribute and/or modify this document under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License, Version 1.2 or any later version published by the Free Software Foundation.