Hi Bert,BertTuyt wrote:I'm planning to buy next year a dual-processor system with a Intel Sandy Bridge or Ivy Bridge (most likely with 8-cores each). Maybe the Ivy Bridge is not available in 2012 (basically this is the tick from tick-tock, or otherwise stated the die-shrink to 22nm).
I also assume at that time as these processors have also more memory-channels, that such a motherboard could containing > 48 GByte Memory.
Assuming a clock speed around 3 - 3.4 Ghz, would the 8P DB generation (also backed up by a 500G SD) something which could be done in less then 1 month, or do you think this is still unrealistic?
Bert
To my experience the most important point in your configuration is the amount of memory. Let's take just an example :
You want to generate the 1421 (and 2114) db. What do you need for a very fast generation ?
1) the 7 pieces db in order to deal with all captures => 21Gb
2) the 0521 db to deal with a white promotion => 2,5Gb
3) the 1412 db to deal with a black promotion => 21Gb
for a total amount of about 45Gb
By preloading these db you avoid any other access disk and you have only to work on an efficient multithread alogorithm.
No doubt for me that you need far less than 1 month for the 8 db generation.
Curiously, as soon as you have a lot of memory, I think SSD disk will not give you a very big advantage during the generation process. Access disk was for me a major problem to solve because I have only 12Gb of memory but for you I think it's not a relevant point.