If the simulation ran as a task under the real BOINC then it could.

In other words, the simulator would be an application run under BOINC in which 
each simulation run (or run set) would be a separate task.

I join BOINC project and as new schedulers are to be tried tasks would be 
issued and run by the people that are attached.  Returned results would show 
the effects of the changes.

To make this work of course the client and thus the simulator would need to 
have additional logging outputs as I have suggested in other posts.  We 
currently do not keep any sort of history information log as to what was done 
when and how and in conjunction with what other projects...

On Jan 8, 2010, at 10:20 AM, David Anderson wrote:

> I don't understand what you mean.
> Simulation lets you study the interactions of
> long/short jobs, multithread jobs, GPU jobs, multiple projects, etc.,
> quickly and with quantitative and reproducible results.
> Anything involving the real BOINC client doesn't have these properties.
> 
> [email protected] wrote:
>> It would be good if we had a suite of tests to run CPU schedulers through
>> and a proposed CPU scheduler change could be tested quickly.  I proposed
>> setting this up as the "BOINC" project tasks.  The memorex in this case
>> could get us answers about the effectiveness much faster than live does.
>> The problem is that the edge conditions do not happen frequently.  Most of
>> the time on most machines any CPU scheduler will work.  It is only
>> sometimes that there is a major problem where some task will be reported
>> weeks late, or a resource is ignored for a day or two...
>> 
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