Usually involves running the system open-air and trying out different orientations of a dedicated VRM fan. Then finding a way to suspend it in that position using cables and tie-wraps.
@Mgetz Here's my FX-8350 rig. It actually took me more than a year to final realize that the performance inconsistencies were due to the VRMs overheating. They didn't have any temperature sensors that were visible to the monitoring programs. But I did finally realize what the problem was when I took a heat sensor to the system while it had been running under a sustained load.
@Borgleader When you go AIO or any sort of water, you need to be careful of the VRMs. Because the stock cooler pushes air out over the VRMs, but with water cooling, the air around the socket is stagnant.
@Borgleader No, regular ATX, in an old case that wasn't designed for radiators.
Someone told me the robot their team built has cpu running at near 90% - 100% a lot of the times, yet heat wasn't a problem. I am amazed, pretty sure their system has optimized code for image recognition and probably real time motion control, not sure how it doesn't get heat up.
I finally figured out the difference between fantasy and sci-fi. Sci-fi, especially hard science fiction obeys the the laws of physics, they sometimes contain the extension of the physical laws as we know it. Fantasy alters the physical laws. ~T31Kitty does stupid~
@Borgleader avoid ASRock and MSI for the current iteration, also avoid lower end ASUS and Gigabyte... (by lower end I mean sub $200) particularly if you want to consider any sort of overclocking.
@Mysticial Honestly I'd consider a similar setup for the board you're getting with a replacement heatsink(s) that have much better surface area. You can dissipate that 55W you just need appropriate cooling on it.
@Borgleader Mostly consider which chip you're going to get, if you're going to get the 12 or 16 core you need a higher phase count VRM, preferably real phases not fake phases like ASUS sometimes does
also consider debugging features
and what sort of storage needs you have given the limitations of the chipset (do you need 3 NVM.e for example)
@Mgetz I'll see. VRM heatsinks aren't that easy to change since the mounting and spacing is very board specific. So if I'll see if I can get away with the existing one.
I doubt it's going to be a bigger handful than the Harpertown server I dealt with back in 2009. That one had 16 FB-DIMMs + an NB that pulled 40W with a tiny heatsink.
I had to use a 38mm thick high static pressure fan to do it.
Likewise, the ram wasn't any worse. Together they draw around 400W under load.
Also had to use high-static pressure fans.
That mobo ended up burning itself out too many times. They were only certified for 95W chips, and was "recertified" for 150W chips. After 3 RMAs (which were all granted), I got sick of it and switched to a Supermicro board which was a lot better - though it had no PCIe x16 slots.
@Mysticial yeah that single EPS12V was probably toasty then, that board really wasn't intended for use in a case like that or with that high of draw on the CPUs. 150W TDP doesn't mean that's where the chip stops drawing it just means that's the 'average' TDP IIRC
particularly on older Chips like that they may not have been as cooperative with the boards like they are now
in theory if you put a 150W chip in a 95W board now the board can cap the draw by just telling the CPU "LOL NOPE"
The only configuration of that rig that didn't overheat either the ram or the NB was too loud. And the machine had ridiculous maintenance costs. Despite it being a server and such, it was the least reliable of all my systems - including the overclocked ones.
The Xeon X5482 C-stepping. 150w of goodness (back then).
@Mysticial From a casual look it looks like the board has 2-3 power planes, the EPS12v for the CPUs (probably max 250W-300W on that ) and possibly ram then you have main and the two 75W connectors... that's not a lot of power for that board. So my assumption is the ram is on the EPS12V given how power hungry FB-DIMMS are
@Mgetz I didn't really think much about power delivery until the aftermath of that build. I realized later on that most of the desktop boards are overbuilt for overclocking. The overclocks that I do tend to be minimal because my workloads will break any aggressive overclock. So I was never able to push boards that far. OTOH, server boards are not meant to be OC'ed so they're no reason to overbuild them.
tbf if you're building a board for a 400w CPU... and it's soldered it's a lot easier to worry about power because you already know the power limit for the CPU plane... everything else is more variable but much lower draw in most cases
@Mgetz I do wonder on the Asrock board if the overkill ram VRM will help with the ram OCs.
Given that the system is going to be severely memory-bound anyway. I'm most likely going to leave the CPU at stock, but jack up the ram as high as possible.
@Mysticial probably not, the t-topology was actually something I meant to mention. AGESA seems to be aggressively tuned for daisy chain
There is no reason for them to have put two high side MOSFETs on that VRM, and the extra inductor is a waste honestly assuming that it's even part of the memory VRM
My guess is that you'll struggle to get off of stock RAM speeds tbh on that board with 32GB DIMMS
@Mgetz We'll find out. As it is right now, there are no 32GB DIMMs clocked above 2666.
Given the timelines involved, it's unlikely what I want will be available by September. So I'll have to either steal from an older machine or get those and upgrade later.
@Mysticial true and in theory that memory controller can handle 3200 out of the box. It does strike me as odd that ASRock would go with T-Top when everybody else is going daisy chain... to me that sounds like they are ignoring AMD recommendations
Shit, I don't have any DDR4 machines which I can take offline. They're all still in service. I am about to take 2 of my DDR3 machines offline... But that doesn't help.
Two problems = one of which is a 1st world problem. 1. Both of my 128GB machines are primary workstations which do need 100+. 2. The aesthetics will get messed up if I steal from either machine.
@Mysticial Given how picky older AMDs are about RAM, I certainly wouldn't bet anything on its working there (and even if you were willing to change the mobo, the situation doesn't change).
@JerryCoffin Memory controller is in theory good to 3200 out of the box, and has diminishing returns after 3600 due to internal issues
Bigger issue is the board topology is odd, and it's a less supported board. So the likelihood of getting that board to support that ram at all is kinda low
@Mgetz He was talking about buying memory for the new build, then (when he can get RGB sticks) putting this memory into his older machine. Point was that it may not (and probably won't) ever work in the older machine.
@Mgetz So the new build is going to have a window on it. So I'm looking for high-clocked 32 GB DIMMs that look nice. But I can get shittier ram temporarily - but only if I can shove them into an older rig that can use it - namely my Zen1 box. But Jerry is right - those are really picky with ram. And I wouldn't count on it being able to run 32 GB DIMMs - let along stably at any speed.
So it can handle 32GB DIMMs, but says nothing about the stability.
Annoyingly, the only machines I have which are most likely to take those 32GB DIMMs are precisely the two 128 GB workstations that I currently have which are both way overclocked - memory-wise.
And I don't want to mess with the ram since they work with the aesthetics with the rest of the build. (and also because it took me a long time to get the OC right on them)
@Mysticial I kinda suspect they aren't really expecting that memory config on that board. Because the chip and the memory cost 4 times the board alone... each
I suspect the Taichi has been extensively tested for that
@Mgetz Somehow reminds me of the typical situation with cameras and lenses. A beginner has a hundred dollar lens and a shiny new thousand dollar camera. A pro has ten thousand dollars worth of lenses and a camera that may have cost two or three thousand new, but is now so beat up it's probably worth five hundred at best...
Socket AM4 is a microprocessor socket used by AMD's central processing units (CPUs) built on the Zen (including Zen+ and Zen 2) and Excavator microarchitectures.AM4 was launched in September 2016 and was designed to replace the sockets AM3+, FM2+ and FS1b as a single platform. It has 1331 pin slots and is the first from AMD to support DDR4-compatible memory as well as achieve unified compatibility between high-end CPUs (previously using Socket AM3+) and AMD's lower-end APUs (on various other sockets).
== Features ==
Support for Zen (including Zen+ and Zen 2) based family of CPUs and APUs (Ryzen...
@Mgetz Wrong! Dead wrong! (Ford actually stood for "Fix Or Repair Daily"). But yeah, at the time essentially the only decent cars were Japanese, and (some) Mercedes (and possibly a few BMWs, but certainly nowhere close to all of them).
@Mgetz With an '80s Ford, you were just glad it wasn't you who was found on the road dead (says the guy who's actually ridden in one of the exploding Pintos).
@Mgetz Warped names for all the majors were common (and mostly deserved) at the time. Fucked Over Rebuilt Dodge, No-Power, Shove it or leave it, and (my personal favorite) Holds in more trouble (among many others). Ford probably got the most, not because they were actually the worst, but simply because it's a short name that's easy to backronym.
Granted, I mentioned earlier that my 1800x's memory (4 x 16gb Hynix) wouldn't work on my Asus X99-A. One of the channels doesn't like it. But my 8 x 16gb G. Skill Samsung B-die kit does work.
Hello guys, I really need help with a linked list assignment.The problem I am stuck on is pretty simple but a bit confusing. I truly need a helping hand, anyone?
If I want to setup service discovery in a cluster in which each instance cannot directly see each other instance of the same services... Would having 2 service discovery server be the only way I can have clustered service discovery?
say service discovery 1 broadcast to service discovery 2 so the first service knows all its replicate through the second discovery service and discovery 2 does the same through the first service
then have them sync between each others to get all the services in the clusters
because I'm stuck with each instance behind a proxy and all of the service instance have the same hostname so doing a request to that hostname ends up to self