Ok, I found a little fun.

http://www.neoseeker.com/forums/18/t1330879-samsung-ssd-awesomeness-aka-super-fast-computer/
[1] 

        * Intel Extreme Core2-Quad (3.2 GHz)
        * 24 Samsung 256 GB SSD
disks in 6 TB Raid-0 (various hardware raid controllers)

Result: disk
I/O +2,000 MB/s 

I'm convinced. SSD raid-0 is in my next hardware
build. 

Tom 

On Wed, 20 Apr 2011 08:13:10 +0000, "Moses Odd"  wrote:
You have already a raid-0 configuration, put SSD drives on it,
 you'd
find some benchs here
http://www.tomshardware.com/reviews/ssd-raid-iops,2848-6.html [2]


Moses Odd

----- Original Message ----- 

From: Tom Hoar 

Sent:
04/19/11 06:41 PM 

To: Moses Odd 

Subject: Re: [Moses-support] How
much Ram for Europarl? 

Well, that's essentially my point. SSD's seem
like a cost-effective alternative to expensive RAM and less complex
(fewer parts) than RAID-0. I've had jobs, however, that generated over
150 GB in temp files and ran out of space (not fun). So, an 80 GB SSD
disk isn't big enough. That's why I was curious about the configuration.


Also, we run binarized tables and language models (KenLM) from a
RAID-0, which recovers 50-75% of the lost performance compared to
memory-loaded text tables and models. It would seem like a fast SSD over
iodrive/PCIe would shift the bottleneck to the IO-to-memory bus. I don't
see much advantage to installing all of Linux on SSD over well-planned
and configured mounts. Then again, a server configuration is  under 4
GB, so maybe a complete install is just easier.  

Tom 

On Tue, 19 Apr
2011 16:16:49 +0000, "Moses Odd"  wrote:  
Hi,

 ideally swap and tmp
have to stay in fast disks,
 why not in ram disk or SSD ?
 See this
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Ddrdrive_x1.jpg
[4]
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Solid-state_drive [5]

 some commercial
producer 
http://www.fusionio.com/products/iodrive/
[6]
http://www.fusionio.com/products/iodriveduo/
[7]
http://www.ocztechnology.com/ocz-revodrive-pci-express-ssd.html
[8]
http://www.ramsan.com/products
[9]
http://www.3dnow.net/phpBB2/viewtopic.php?f=1&t=1649 [10]

 with a
SSD you can reach 200~400 MB/s rw bandwidth with ~1 ms access time on
Sata
 with a iodrive you can reach 750~1500 MB/s rw bandwidth with ~30
µs access time

 where an HD you can reach 50~70 MB/s rw bandwidth with
12~25 ms access time on Sata

 For the 80 GB HD, I defined a 16 GB swap
partition and the rest for /tmp.
 Could be interesting to install also
Linux on SSD.

 Moses 

----- Original Message ----- 

From: Tom Hoar


Sent: 04/19/11 03:08 PM 

To: maria.mach...@ec.europa.eu [11]


Subject: Re: [Moses-support] How much Ram for Europarl? 

Wow.
Excellent tip. After looking at pricing on Ebay, it's well-worth 
 the
0-0 investment. We run multiple swap partitions across 4 
 physical
disks, plus a RAID 0 for /tmp space. It speeds things up, but 
 not to
your extent. 

 Can you share some details about the drive specs, i.e.
interface, cache 
 size, etc? Also, what is your configuration between
swap and tmp size? 

 Tom 

 On Mon, 18 Apr 2011 18:01:17 +0200,  wrote:

> Hello, 
> 
> Building the phrase table really used to take me a long,
long time. 
> 
> I have a 4-processor computer with 8 GB RAM and with a
12 million 
> segment corpus (about 0.5 billion words EN+PT), the whole
training 
> took about 7 days, of which 2 days to build the phrase table
(using 
> the swap too). 
> 
> However, now I have a 80 GB solid-state
drive installed for the swap 
> and temp files and the training of a
larger corpus (14 million 
> segments) took about the same time. The
main difference was in the 
> building of the phrase table: it took only
7 hours. Beautiful! 
> 
> I hope this information may be useful to you
... although the corpus 
> you want to train is not as large. 
> 
>
Maria José 
> 
> -----Original Message----- 
> From:
moses-support-boun...@mit.edu [13] 
>
[mailto:moses-support-boun...@mit.edu [14]] On Behalf Of Tom Hoar 
>
Sent: Monday, April 18, 2011 4:05 PM 
> To: David Wilkinson 
> Cc:
moses-support@mit.edu [15] 
> Subject: Re: [Moses-support] How much Ram
for Europarl? 
> 
> 
> Your report of 100% physical usage, growing swap
usage and low CPU 
> load 
> is normal when working with limited RAM
machines. With only 4 Gb Ram 
> and 
> the new (larger) EuroParl v6
corpus, you could train for 3 or 4 days 
> depending on how you setup
your swap partition. Even then, it's 
> possible 
> you will run out of
RAM before it's finished. Upgrading to 8 Gb ram 
> is a 
> move in the
right direction. 
> 
> Once it's finished training, you'll want to use
the binarized the 
> tables and language model, which MMM's train-1.11
script creates. 
> 
> Tom 
> 
> 
> On Mon, 18 Apr 2011 14:52:10 +0100,
Philipp Koehn 
>  
> wrote: 
>> Hi, 
>> 
>> I am not familiar with the
MMM setup, but one of the causes 
>> of memory use may be the
translation table. You should use 
>> the on-disk translation table. 
>>

>> -phi 
>> 
>> On Mon, Apr 18, 2011 at 2:47 PM, David Wilkinson 
>> 
wrote: 
>>> I have set up an Ubuntu 10.04 system with the 
>>>
moses-for-mere-mortals 
>>> scripts. The default corpus trained in about
6-7 hours on my system 
>>> (Athlon 
>>> x3 3.2Ghz, 4Gb Ram). I am now
trying to train the system with the 
>>> Europarl 
>>> German-English
parallel corpus (about 45m words in each language), 
>>> again 
>>>
using the default moses-for-mere-mortals settings. The system has 
>>>
been 
>>> running for 24 hrs and is currently using all the physical
memory 
>>> and about 
>>> 1.2Gb of swap. None of the cores are being
used more than 10%, so 
>>> like this 
>>> it will take a very long time
to finish. If I double the ram to 
>>> 8gb, 
>>> will 
>>> this be
sufficient? 
>>> Many Thanks 
>>> David 
>>>
_______________________________________________ 
>>> Moses-support
mailing list 
>>> Moses-support@mit.edu [18] 
>>>
http://mailman.mit.edu/mailman/listinfo/moses-support [19] 
>>> 
>>> 
>>
_______________________________________________ 
>> Moses-support
mailing list 
>> Moses-support@mit.edu [20] 
>>
http://mailman.mit.edu/mailman/listinfo/moses-support [21] 
> 
>
_______________________________________________ 
> Moses-support mailing
list 
> Moses-support@mit.edu [22] 
>
http://mailman.mit.edu/mailman/listinfo/moses-support [23]


_______________________________________________ 
Moses-support mailing
list 
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http://mailman.mit.edu/mailman/listinfo/moses-support [25]

 


Links:
------
[1]
http://www.neoseeker.com/forums/18/t1330879-samsung-ssd-awesomeness-aka-super-fast-computer/
[2]
http://www.tomshardware.com/reviews/ssd-raid-iops,2848-6.html
[3]
mailto:moses4o...@gmx.com
[4]
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Ddrdrive_x1.jpg
[5]
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Solid-state_drive
[6]
http://www.fusionio.com/products/iodrive/
[7]
http://www.fusionio.com/products/iodriveduo/
[8]
http://www.ocztechnology.com/ocz-revodrive-pci-express-ssd.html
[9]
http://www.ramsan.com/products
[10]
http://www.3dnow.net/phpBB2/viewtopic.php?f=1&t=1649
[11]
mailto:maria.mach...@ec.europa.eu
[12]
mailto:maria.mach...@ec.europa.eu
[13]
mailto:moses-support-boun...@mit.edu
[14]
mailto:moses-support-boun...@mit.edu
[15]
mailto:moses-support@mit.edu
[16] mailto:pko...@inf.ed.ac.uk
[17]
mailto:davidzw...@hotmail.com
[18] mailto:Moses-support@mit.edu
[19]
http://mailman.mit.edu/mailman/listinfo/moses-support
[20]
mailto:Moses-support@mit.edu
[21]
http://mailman.mit.edu/mailman/listinfo/moses-support
[22]
mailto:Moses-support@mit.edu
[23]
http://mailman.mit.edu/mailman/listinfo/moses-support
[24]
mailto:Moses-support@mit.edu
[25]
http://mailman.mit.edu/mailman/listinfo/moses-support
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