A strange case (different CPU but same matlab version, different calculated results)
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Hi all,
Have there anyone encountered such a strange situation? Different CPUs calculate different results, I mean "0" value, one CPU calculates 10^-10 orders of magnitude, another 10^-19 orders of magnitude, they are the same, right? But after some of the same operations, the final result can be very different.
Note that the matlab version is the same on both CPUs and the code is the same.
7 comentarios
Walter Roberson
el 5 de Jul. de 2022
Is one AMD and the other is Intel?
ma Jack
el 6 de Jul. de 2022
Chunru
el 6 de Jul. de 2022
Do you have any code with parallel computing? If so, different order of computations or different number of workers avalable may cause different results (due to the different rounding error).
Walter Roberson
el 6 de Jul. de 2022
I seem to recall that a difference between i5 and i7 is that the i7 has more vector calculation instructions.
ma Jack
el 6 de Jul. de 2022
ma Jack
el 6 de Jul. de 2022
Walter Roberson
el 6 de Jul. de 2022
Given the same MATLAB version and the same kind of processor, the number of processors or order of parfor loops should not make a difference to the final result, unless
- you are doing I/O to a device
- you are using GPU and have a device selection going on
- you are using a "reduction variable"
- you are using parpool data queues and doing something with the data values
- you have configured your local pool to permit more than one thread per worker
On the other hand, in non-parallel regions, the results of calling into the high speed libraries can potentially depend upon the number of processors or cache details for the processors.
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