Thanks for the feedback.
Furmark was what I was looking for. For posterity: I was using GPUTest, which turned out to be an older version of the stress test in Furmark. I had also tried 3DMark, but it only loops with the commercial version, and I couldn’t justify the expense for a stress test. Also, unless I am missing something in the super-cool interface, the eVGA precision software I got through Steam does not have any sort of stress test built into it. It has only some sort of “instantaneous self-test” which appears to be permanently inactive for me. From: b...@frags.us [mailto:b...@frags.us] On Behalf Of Rich Mingin (vfio-users) Sent: Tuesday, July 12, 2016 10:17 AM It's been a long time since I did it, but I remember 3Dmark (commercial and free versions) having a looping mode, and I know Furmark was a real GPU killer last time I looked. If you have an eVGA graphics card, their Precision software includes a multiple-test-type version of Furmark built in. On Mon, Jul 11, 2016 at 9:19 PM, Brian Yglesias <br...@atlanticdigitalsolutions.com <mailto:br...@atlanticdigitalsolutions.com> > wrote: I'm not much of a gamer, so I'm looking for software to use for troubleshooting stability issues. E.g. the overclockers all use prime95, or at least they used to. Is there some analog de facto standard for GPU testing? The software I've found so far doesn't have a continuous testing mode. Anything with diagnostic info would be a plus. _______________________________________________ vfio-users mailing list vfio-users@redhat.com <mailto:vfio-users@redhat.com> https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/vfio-users
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