Vincent Diepeveen wrote: > > That has to change in order to get GPU calculations more into mainstream. > > When i calculate on paper for some applications, a GPU can be potentially > factor 4-8 faster than a standard quadcore 2.4ghz is right now. > > Getting that performance out of the GPU is more than a fulltime task > however, > without having indepth technical hardware data on the GPU.
Completely untrue. One of my colleagues, who does a lot of work with GPU processors for astrophysics calculations, was able to increase the performance of the MD5 algorithm by ~100x with about 1.5 days of work. He called this this code that he wrote "(totally unoptimized, a straight CUDA C implementation of Rivest's algorithm". He tinkered some more, adding some optimizations, and I believe he ended up with 350x performance improvement. Here, I quote his e-mail on his first round of coding that he sent me: <quote> The other day in NYC on HPC-UG meeting someone mentioned that GPUs would be perfect for password cracking, with which I wholeheartedly agreed (on theoretical grounds). But theory is nothing without experiment :) , so I spent the last night and this morning writing a GPU MD5 hash routine (totally unoptimized, a straight CUDA C implementation of Rivest's algorithm). The results? * GPU (single GeForce 8800 Ultra on cylon): 57,640,967.264473 hash/second * The same algorithm on the CPU (Intel(R) Core(TM)2 Quad CPU Q6700 @ 2.66GHz on cylon): 543,839.652381 hash/second A factor of ~100 difference. Sweet. Another point of comparison: the fastest, assembly-level optimized x86 MD5 code, running on a _dual_ 3.2 GHz Xeon (see http://c3rb3r.openwall.net/mdcrack/) can do 42e6 hash/sec. And remember, I wrote the CUDA code in a day and a half, with _no_ optimization. Nice. In another words, one GPU card with an amateurishly written MD5 code can brute-force crack an 8-character MD5 hashed password consisting of [0-9A-Za-z] in about 6 weeks. Now imagine if someone who knew what they were doing optimized the code, and got a cluster of Tesla's instead of a single gaming card that I used.... Cool :-) . </quote> -- Prentice _______________________________________________ Beowulf mailing list, Beowulf@beowulf.org To change your subscription (digest mode or unsubscribe) visit http://www.beowulf.org/mailman/listinfo/beowulf