If enabled, this option can vastly improve kernel replay speed, as save and restore of the mutable state for each kernel pass will be skipped. Skipping of save/restore of input/output buffers allows you to specify that all profiled kernels on the context do not change the contents of their input buffers during execution, or call device malloc/free or new/delete, that leave the device heap in a different state. Specifically, a kernel can malloc and free a buffer in the same launch, but it cannot call an unmatched malloc or an unmatched free. Note: incorrectly using this mode while one of the kernels does modify the input buffer or uses unmatched malloc/free will result in undefined behavior, including kernel execution failure and/or corrupted device data.
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The Aggregating content store contains a primary store and a set of secondary stores. The order in which the stores appear in the list of participating stores is important. The first store in the list is known as the primary store. Content can be read from any of the stores, as if it were a single store. When the replicator goes to fetch content, the stores are searched from first to last. The stores should therefore, be arranged in order of speed.
it means that your computer still has the host key for the old QueenBee cluster. You should run these commands to remove the old host key: % ssh-keygen -R qb.loni.org% ssh-keygen -R 208.100.92.21
OpenACC is the name of an application program interface (API) that uses a collection of compiler directives to accelerate applications that run on multicore and GPU systems. The OpenACC compiler directives specify regions of code that can be offloaded from a CPU to an attached accelerator. A quick reference guide is available here.
I haven't played with the 60/66 MHz fsb for some time. I was too scared to do anything other than speedsys and cachechk for fear of damage to the CPU or motherboard. It might turn out to be difficult to replace either of my Cyrix 5x86 CPU.
Feipoa suggested I drop the CPU speed down to 100 MHz to make sure its not a frequency related stability issue or alternatively I could have popped a Cyrix 120MHz Stepping 0 Revision 5 CPU in but I did neither of those things. Somewhat fed up with tweaking after such a long time of stability I removed the Cyrix 120MHz CPU and installed a Pentium Overdrive at 83MHz. 2ff7e9595c
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