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JonathanB

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Everything posted by JonathanB

  1. I contacted DayZ support out of my sheer curiosity about the -exThreads launch parameter for DayZ. Below is my original message and the response from support (Jan Libich). * QUESTION * I own DayZ StandAlone and I am aware of the various STEAM Launch Parameters available to me for tweaking. I am curious how the parameter -exThreads works, as I dug up some information that explains the basics of how it works, creating threads for Geometry and Texture loading along with File Operations. The problem I have is trying to understand what number this should be set to. The available options are 0,3,5,7 as far as I am aware, however I am confused because I have an Intel Core-i5 4670K which is a 4 Core CPU without HyperThreading, so my CPU has no "Threads" to allocate (at least I think this is how it works with -exThreads?) so I would set -exThreads=0 and -cpuCount=4 right? Am I completely wrong and the amount of CPU "Threads" have nothing to do with the DayZ Engine "Threads"? Can you forward this question to someone who works on the engine-side of DayZ StandAlone? Thanks! * RESPONSE * Hello, I'm sorry but you are mistaken. Although I'm not an expert when it comes to DayZ engine I have some years of experience when it comes to PC hardware, so I will do my best to explain. A "thread" is an abstract concept. It has nothing to do with actual core count of your CPU or the fact that your CPU does or does not have hyperthreading. Basically a thread is a sequence of CPU instructions done in serial way. How the work actually gets done is completely out of its control. A thread is just a concept that says that on a particular CPU core, a sequential set of instructions is currently running. Now, let's say that you set the amount to 6 threads. Now the game should do its best to spread across 6 threads - 6 running sets of certain parts of the same program. How these 6 threads will be processed on your CPU - that depends on Windows and the CPU itself. That's why -exThreads can boost or tank your performance. If you have a 4 core CPU with hyper-threading (which is just a fancy way of saying that one CPU core can process 2 threads simultaneously - in theory, as long as there are free registers, ALU units and whatnot in the core itself) then optimally, you can process each thread separately because Windows sees your CPU as an 8-core CPU. So it should boost your performance. If you have a 4-core CPU without HT, therefore your CPU can process up to 4 threads at the same time, you might still see performance improvement (or you might not). There is no way to know beforehand what a certain setting of exThreads will do with your performance. You have to try it yourself. Also, it is incorrect that your CPU has "0" threads. It has actually 4 threads (each core can process 1 thread). It is also not possible to reduce the game to 0 threads. Each program must have at least 1 thread otherwise it cannot exist in running state. On the side note, please do not think too much of HyperThreading. I do not want to bash it in any way but its contribution for higher fps in games is small at best. The idea of HyperThreading is just that if there are free resources within a core, the system can assign another thread to it, if possible. As games tend to tax one or few cores really hard, they barely see any improvement out of HyperThreading because most cores are already used to the max. It's a nice-to-have niché functionality but not essential in a gaming rig. It's quite powerful for professional graphics / video editing, though. I just wanted to share this with everyone here on the forums. I don't know if this will be of interest to anyone, but I figured I may as well share what I was told by the support representative.
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