[Beowulf] Re: ECC Memory and Job Failures (Huw Lynes)
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Pfenniger Daniel danielpf at gmail.comFri Apr 24 14:17:31 PDT 2009
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Prentice Bisbal wrote: > Gerry Creager wrote: >> David Mathog wrote: >>> Huw Lynes <lynesh at cardiff.ac.uk> wrote: >>> >>>> http://blog.revolution-computing.com/2009/04/blame-it-on-cosmic-rays.html >>>> >>>> >>>> Apparently someone ran a large cluster job with both ECC and none-ECC >>>> RAM. They consistently got the wrong answer when foregoing ECC. >>> There were not very many details given. I would not rule out the >>> possibility that the nonECC memory was slightly faulty, and that the >>> observed errors had nothing to do with gamma rays at all. A better test >>> would have been to use the same ECC memory for both tests, and to turn >>> ECC memory correction on and off in the BIOS. >> Where's Jim Lux. I'm sure he's an opinion on this, too... >> > > Opinion? I think he could write a book on this topic! > > Last time this issue came up, he included links to several papers on > this topic published by Boeing. As you go up in the atmosphere, the > [prevalence|probability|concentration] of cosmic rays goes up > significantly. Boeing has done a lot of research on this topic, since it > can affect the operation of their [products|weapons]. > > Once I took a radiation detector (RM-60 from aw-el.com) attached to an early "netbook" (Atari Portfolio) and recorded the radiation level on a 11'000 m flight. From memory the radiation level in the cabin increased from about 12-17 micro R/hr, a natural radiation level at the ground level, to over 300 micro R/hr, about 20 times more. Since the natural level of radiation over a lifetime correponds to a semi-lethal instantaneous dosis, I would think that for the crew working years in airplanes the cumulated radiation coming from cosmic rays may be significant. Dan
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