ATI vs NV, analysis and results - Printable Version +- hashcat Forum (https://hashcat.net/forum) +-- Forum: Misc (https://hashcat.net/forum/forum-15.html) +--- Forum: Hardware (https://hashcat.net/forum/forum-13.html) +--- Thread: ATI vs NV, analysis and results (/thread-193.html) |
ATI vs NV, analysis and results - radix - 11-23-2010 So, there seem to be quite a few posts regarding which is better, ATI or NVidia. I am by no means an expert on this subject, and I do ask that the experts contribute so that we may all be enlightened. I know atom and Rolf kicked this idea around in IRC the other day, but I hadn't seen a post appear. I am running Ubuntu 10.04 LTS x64 on an i7 980X, 12 gig DDR3 2000, and 4x GTX 480's. This has been averaging me 4400M/s. Not really the speeds I would have expected from (until recently) NVidia's flagship card, but not bad. Let it also be known I am not a fanboy of Intel/AMD/NVidia. I want what works best, and is in my price range. From what I understand: ATI pros: Cheap fast (ATI can double comparable NVidia speeds on small # of hashes) Low power Less heat Many overclocking tools available for all cards on windows/linux ATI cons: Poor stream support in linux/windows Poor driver support in linux Less precise WPA cracking NVidia pros: Excellent CUDA support in linux/windows Good driver support for windows/linux More precise WPA cracking Have yet to see an issue with needing a monitor per card NVidia cons: Slower overall cracking (unless large # of hashes) Cards run really hot Cards consume ALOT of power Expensive Please feel free to correct me as I am new to hashcat, or add your experience with XX vendor. RE: ATI vs NV, analysis and results - D3ad0ne - 11-23-2010 Well I'll add my reasons for going with Nvidia. #1 There are a lot more applications out there that use CUDA instead of opencl #2 You can support more cards with nvidia. Ati doesn't scale well, and more than 4 cards isn't supported. Currently I'm running 8 nvidia cards. On top of that nvidia works very well with large list list. And I'm not holding my breath but when/if nvidia ever supports bit align ati will drop a peg or two. RE: ATI vs NV, analysis and results - atom - 11-23-2010 i will also throw in some argument, we can merge them later: advantages: =========== ATI: - better performance-to-price ratio - excellent single-hash performance in general which is required when cracking modern hashes like $1$, $6$ or phpass NV: - performance loss on unsalted multi-hashes is less than 10% even on huge hashtables because of better memory access - produces nearly 0% cpu usage even on multi gpu systems disadvantages: ============== ATI: - user manually needs to disable crossfirex - requires kernel code written with proper vector datatype usage to get full performance but not all algorithms are compatible with that. - opencl runtime is not installed by catalyst drivers per default (requires special APP version) - linux specific: requires running X and a user logged into xsession that runs oclhashcat - windows specific: each gpu needs to be connected to monitor NV: - no bitalign instruction. some workarounds are known but that are accessible by cuda only (not opencl) - no cross compiler, make usage of special higher instructions impossible - binary kernels in propretiary format bugs: ===== ATI: - hd5970 only 1st gpu is supported (ati said they fix it with sdk v2.3) - hd6xxx are not suppored at all (ati said they fix it with sdk v2.3) - linux specific: multi-gpu is not supported at all (ati said they fix it with sdk v2.3) - linux specific: each gpu produces 100% cpu load RE: ATI vs NV, analysis and results - atom - 01-31-2011 update after SDK v2.3: advantages: =========== ATI: - better performance-to-price ratio - excellent single-hash performance in general which is required when cracking modern hashes like $1$, $6$ or phpass NV: - performance loss on unsalted multi-hashes is less than 10% even on huge hashtables because of better memory access disadvantages: ============== ATI: - requires kernel code written with proper vector datatype usage to get full performance but not all algorithms are compatible with that. - linux specific: requires running X and a user logged into xsession that runs oclhashcat - windows specific: each gpu needs to be connected to monitor NV: - no bitalign instruction. some workarounds are known but that are accessible by cuda only (not opencl) bugs: ===== ATI: - hd5970 only 1st gpu is supported (windows only) RE: ATI vs NV, analysis and results - Gajan - 08-17-2011 Dummy plug / each card connected to a monitor is no longer needed. The new catalyst fixed that :-) |