stressapptest
EIPs
stressapptest | EIPs | |
---|---|---|
14 | 486 | |
528 | 12,583 | |
2.1% | 1.0% | |
3.7 | 9.8 | |
3 months ago | 5 days ago | |
C++ | Python | |
Apache License 2.0 | Creative Commons Zero v1.0 Universal |
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
Activity is a relative number indicating how actively a project is being developed. Recent commits have higher weight than older ones.
For example, an activity of 9.0 indicates that a project is amongst the top 10% of the most actively developed projects that we are tracking.
stressapptest
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Need help on fix
That's super old and not very useful anymore. Use Google's stressapptest Might also be worth booting Windows for TM5 or HCI Memtest.
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Daily General Discussion - March 2, 2023
I've personally used stressapptest a lot ( https://github.com/stressapptest/stressapptest ), it's not perfect but it's easy to use from a linux CLI. If that can run for a whole day without spitting out errors then it's probably not the RAM
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Ram OC is suddenly unstable , even though it was running perfectly fine before.
You're running linux? You should try GSAT for validating memory OC stability and stress testing.
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Linus Tolvards is upgrading his computer with ECC RAM after a module failed causing random memory corruption
For what it's worth, this was one of the semi-popular "new" memory testing tools doing the rounds back when Ryzen was new: https://github.com/stressapptest/stressapptest
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Is having 4 sticks of ram really not that stable with Ryzen how some people say it is?
You need to run some memory stress test to verify that, like google's stressapptest (runs in Linux only)
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Building a PC for my kid
It's not guaranteed that 2 kits will work together, but given the total dearth of 4-DIMM kits on the market, that's probably what you'll have to do. Give it a good overnight burn-in test with prime95 large FFTs, and maybe Google stressapptest, especially if you enable XMP.
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PC Shuts Down. Attempts to restart infinity times. Help me save this stupid expensive computer.
If trying to repair the windows install does shit the bed, one debug step you could try would be making a bootable linux usb to see whether that exhibits the same crash behavior. It could pull a bit of double-duty if you run a memory-focused stress tester like: https://github.com/stressapptest/stressapptest to see if it throws up any errors. If you go with a semi-recent Ubuntu release, that one is already in the official software repositories and thus easy to install.
- What's on your magic USB drive?
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Do people still bother with burn-in on new machines? If so what's the Linux community standard for doing so?
Prime95, Intel Linpack or Linpack Xtreme, y-cruncher, GSAT, Blender 3D rendering, Linux kernel compilation works very well too.
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files get regulary corrupted, but btrfs scrub and memtest86+ shows no errors
I'd recommend the (former) Google stressapptest: https://github.com/stressapptest/stressapptest
EIPs
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Ethereum Foundation removes their canary
Even more relevant would be the Ethereum Improvement Proposal repo (where people submit proposals to change the spec):
https://github.com/ethereum/EIPs
Or the go-ethereum execution client (the most popular execution client):
https://github.com/ethereum/go-ethereum
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Bridging the Gap: Better Token Standards for Cross-chain Assets
It’s early in the life of the xERC20 standard, but progress is quickly being made. The standard has been audited and is already live with a few projects. The EIP to adopt the standard has been created, and implementation has begun. Alchemix recently announced support for the xERC20 standard. And Defi Wonderland has published a suggested implementation on their GitHub. This implementation has an interface for the xERC20 contract with eight core functions that the token issuer must implement. These are functions related to setting the Lockbox contract (setLockbox), issuance limits for bridges (setLimits, mintingMaxLimitOf, burningMaxLimitOf, etc.), and the core mint and burn functions.
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Numbers Protocol submitted EIP-7517, Allowing Consent for AI Data Mining on the Blockchain
Check out EIP-7517: Giving Consent for AI Data Mining on the Blockchain
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Exploring ERC20 Tokens: The Powerhouse Behind Ethereum's Tokenized World4
ERC223 is not widely implemented, and there is some debate in the ERC discussion thread about backward compatibility and trade-offs between implementing changes at the contract interface level versus the user interface.
- EIPs/.github/workflows/post-ci.yml at master · ethereum/EIPs
- EIPs/.github/workflows/ci.yml at master · ethereum/EIPs
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Process of recalculating the transactionRoot from a block transaction hash
Ethereum Improvement Proposals (EIPs): These are proposals to change various aspects of Ethereum. They often contain detailed technical discussion and can be a good resource for understanding the finer points of how Ethereum works. EIPs can be found here: https://eips.ethereum.org/
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Burning ETH is great for the price, but may be a risk to decentralization (A critique of the ETH burn model and a recommendation for new economics)
Worth looking at: EIP6968: Contract Secured Revenue on an EVM based L2 https://github.com/ethereum/EIPs/pull/6969/files
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Calling All Devs and Crypto Enthusiasts: A Community-Driven Anti-Scam Registry on the Blockchain
Additionally, I have made an EIP that can help standardise and maintain official contract registry of each DApp. This can help identify official contracts of a protocol vs scammers using fraud contracts but presenting like official protocol. https://github.com/ethereum/EIPs/pull/6807
What are some alternatives?
bitcracker - BitCracker is the first open source password cracking tool for memory units encrypted with BitLocker
bips - Bitcoin Improvement Proposals
1559-outreach - Outreach related to EIP-1559
openzeppelin-contracts - OpenZeppelin Contracts is a library for secure smart contract development.
token-allowance-checker - Control ERC20 token approvals
avalanche-wallet - The Avalanche web wallet
rocketpool - Decentralised Ethereum Liquid Staking Protocol.
solidity - Solidity, the Smart Contract Programming Language
ethereum-burn-stats - Website that showcases EIP-1559 Burn
go-ethereum - Go implementation of the Ethereum protocol
l2beat - L2BEAT is an analytics and research website about Ethereum layer two (L2) scaling solutions.
bsc - A BNB Smart Chain client based on the go-ethereum fork