@All testersPlease keep eye on indices.txt in working directory (if it become non-zero length or not).And if you keep result file, please, keep indices.txt too along with result and WU files.
ap_03no08af_B2_P1_00143_20081121_30048 (1065721003)ap_03no08ag_B2_P1_00100_20081121_20392 (1066329522)- both just started - have chunky indices.txt files (attached). If I'm reading the guesstimates right, these both have a high chance of pulsing out before their allotted span. Have suspended networking for a result capture.
We can use that file for determining blanked areas and to see if these blanked areas gave some signals or not....
Starting parse: .\testDatas\ref-astropulse_5.00_windows_intelx86.exe-JasonShort.dat.resSuccessfully parsed: .\testDatas\ref-astropulse_5.00_windows_intelx86.exe-JasonShort.dat.res--- Found <ap_signal> tags: 40Starting parse: .\testDatas\result-ap_5.00r69_SSE3_blankOverride.exe-JasonShort.dat.resSuccessfully parsed: .\testDatas\result-ap_5.00r69_SSE3_blankOverride.exe-JasonShort.dat.res--- Found <ap_signal> tags: 10Result : Weakly similar or Different.
That second one is a jewel. 2141 blanking indices, leaves about 6422528 samples to process so roughly 81% is blanked. A waste of CPU, but intellectually interesting. If it exits early I suspect the percent blanking reported in the result file won't agree with my calculations, it's done incrementally. In theory it should not be likely to exit early, in practice I'm not even willing to guess.The indices.txt file isn't used for anything, just written during the initialization step which generates the internal array. It's basically the same information which was put into stderr.txt by the Linux 4.37 stock build, but BOINC will only report the last 64K of stderr. I'm glad they preserved it in this form even if it is ridiculously verbose. Joe
I'm slightly surprised by the blanking report at the start of the result file analysis: <percent_blanked> -18.750000 for the 'jewel', and <percent_blanked> -21.785156 for the other.