artunemedia Posted July 1, 2006 Share Posted July 1, 2006 windows xp pentium II dual processors service pack 1 Hash 12 and 13b Is there a dual processor render option? Did a search on forum, did not find easliy any info. Thanks, Also, What is the most efficient path to follow for tutorials, any opinions appreciated. I noticed forum members are ranked, how is this done? I see there are forum tutorials, AN matrix tutorials, Sherwood Forest tutorials and manual tutorials, as a Zbrush artist, I am so bogged down in making zbrush textures that I was wondering what is the fastest path to getting to know the in's and out's of AM All the best, Michael Angelo Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
SirSpectre Posted July 2, 2006 Share Posted July 2, 2006 Unfortunately, A:M doesnt have dual CPU capabilities. I would love to have it, seeing I also have dual CPU. They way i bypass this, is by opening 2 instances of A:M and setting affinity of each instance to a seperate core/cpu. After this is done render as a targa and render opposite frames or render certain ranges on each core/cpu. Now, you ahve to have both Instances minimized in the taskbar other wise your computer may lock up. ( Ive had this happen a few times) Also seems to render a tad faster when its minimized anyway. Hope that helps!! PS: Watch your CPU temperature!!! if it gets to hot, get more fans or only render with normal affinity set. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
artunemedia Posted July 2, 2006 Author Share Posted July 2, 2006 Unfortunately, A:M doesnt have dual CPU capabilities. I would love to have it, seeing I also have dual CPU. They way i bypass this, is by opening 2 instances of A:M and setting affinity of each instance to a seperate core/cpu. After this is done render as a targa and render opposite frames or render certain ranges on each core/cpu. Now, you ahve to have both Instances minimized in the taskbar other wise your computer may lock up. ( Ive had this happen a few times) Also seems to render a tad faster when its minimized anyway. Hope that helps!! PS: Watch your CPU temperature!!! if it gets to hot, get more fans or only render with normal affinity set. Dear Sir Spectre, Thank you for the pointer, I have searched in the Help files for the term affinity. Would it be possible to define the process. Is it simply a matter of opening two projects and then firing them off one at a time and the PC will say, "oh yeah, I'll use two processors", or is there a flag in the software? Thanks, as my version 13 keeps hanging or crashing when I run a render. Sincerely, Michael Angelo http://www.michaelangeloart.com Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
MMZ_TimeLord Posted July 2, 2006 Share Posted July 2, 2006 The process to set the affinity of an instance of A:M is to hit CTRL+ALT+DEL and select "Processes" tab, then right click on the 'Master.exe' process and set it's affinity there. (For windows 2000 & XP) As to using a single instance of A:M with dual-core/hyper-threading, it is currently not possible. As far as NetRender goes, William Pickering has stated that he is working on a way to run more than one instance of RenderMessenger/RenderSlave for mulitple-cores/hyper-threading/multiple-CPUs. If you don't know, NetRender is an 'upgrade' that allows you to run A:M without the CD (it uses a hardware key [uSB Dongle] for copy protection.) and also allows you to create a 'render farm' out of multiple PCs. Hope that helps Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
artunemedia Posted July 5, 2006 Author Share Posted July 5, 2006 Thanks for the tip. Michael Angelo Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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