A few years back one of the PHENIX devs referenced Amdahl's Law and how it affects the performance of PHENIX: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Amdahl's_lawEven though some parts of the refinement are done in parallel on multiple processors, the really time-consuming calculations are done in serial, which ends up governing the overall speed of the process.I have found that Intel Haswell-class processors like the Core i7 4770 perform refinements significantly speedier than our brand new 12-core Xeon server that is less than 6 months old. So it is my naive guess that getting the fastest "single processor performance" will get you maximal refinement speeds on PHENIX.If you want to up the ante a bit more, you can always try overclocking with liquid nitrogen to hit 7.2 Ghz.Cheers, JimOn Wed, Jun 24, 2015 at 8:20 AM, Colin Levy <C.Levy@manchester.ac.uk> wrote:_______________________________________________Apologies for the slightly off topic question.
I am configuring a Linux workstation and would like your thoughts on an optimal setup for running Phenix. A lot of my computing time is spent in refinement and I am keen to put something together that will see a considerable increase in speed from my creaking Mac Pro (2 2.4GHz Quad core Intel Xeon with 24Gb RAM).
Many thanks,
Colin
ManchesterProteinStructureFacility
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