[Beowulf] NVIDIA GPUs, CUDA, MD5, and "hobbyists"
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Joe Landman landman at scalableinformatics.comWed Jun 18 14:57:12 PDT 2008
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Prentice Bisbal wrote: > Vincent Diepeveen wrote: >> Running 128 parallel sessions of md5sum is not so interesting at all, we >> all believe this can be done fast. >> > > Vincent, > > That is the whole point of my original posting. The point was NEVER to > demonstrate the use of GPUs for streaming MD5-encrypted data. This was > the point of my posting: > > 1. To prove that CUDA programming is NOT as difficult as you made it out > to be. Hi Prentis: There is a general impression that CUDA is hard. I am not sure precisely where this is coming from, but this is what I am hearing from multiple quarters. Usually from people whom have not tried it. > > 2. To demonstrate the performance improvement you can get by > parallelizing an operation using CUDA. The MD5 algorithm was perfect for > this. No claims were ever made as to the need for parallelizing MD5. > There is value, however, if your goal is to recover (discover?) an > MD5-hashed password through a brute-force attack. Last time I checked, > MD5 password s are the default for most Linux distros. > > 3. To show that more than just "hobbyists" are investigating GPUs. I think I can comment on some papers submitted to various conferences. I am privy to some work not yet published, so I can't recount that. In short, we have seen papers on segmentation of medical image data sets (Liver segmentation to be precise) on CUDA platforms, getting ~70x performance over a single machine. I am aware of some unnamed bioinformatics applications seeing ... nice ... speedups on CUDA. None of these are hobbyist things. The CUDA eco-system is growing rapidly, with real users. We have 3 CUDA machines in house, one of them my laptop :). I just need to get on a few planes so I can spend that time coding ... -- Joseph Landman, Ph.D Founder and CEO Scalable Informatics LLC, email: landman at scalableinformatics.com web : http://www.scalableinformatics.com http://jackrabbit.scalableinformatics.com phone: +1 734 786 8423 fax : +1 866 888 3112 cell : +1 734 612 4615
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