Blue Iris and Multicore Core i7-860

RoadHazard

n3wb
Joined
Jun 12, 2017
Messages
12
Reaction score
0
Sanity check, please.

Will Blue Iris take advantage of the multiple CPU cores in a Core i7-860? It's a middle-aged Intel device that has 4 physical cores and 8 virtual cores, includes VT-x and EPT, but does not support the UG (unrestricted guest) feature that appeared on later processors.

I already know Blue Iris runs on the chip. The question is, will it take advantage of the multiple cores/threads, or will it limit itself to a single core/thread?
 

aristobrat

IPCT Contributor
Joined
Dec 5, 2016
Messages
2,983
Reaction score
3,180
It also doesn't look like it supports the QuickSync feature that BI uses for H.264 hardware acceleration. That's going to have a negative impact on the total CPU load.

I don't know how to tell if BI would use multiple cores/threads on that specific processor. I have a 3rd-gen i7 and Process Monitor shows BI is using 124 threads.
 

fenderman

Staff member
Joined
Mar 9, 2014
Messages
36,907
Reaction score
21,290
The hardware guide does a fine job of telling me what CPU I should buy, were I buying one. But it does not, as far as I can tell, answer my question.
yes blue iris will...but that processor is a TERRIBLE choice for blue iris...its a powerhog and you need to run a video card with it..
for 100-300 dollars you can buy an i5 (sandybridge to skylake) system that will have quicksync making it at least double as powerful while using at least a third less power...you will make your money back in less than a year...note that processors is well passed middle age...its 8 years old..
 

RoadHazard

n3wb
Joined
Jun 12, 2017
Messages
12
Reaction score
0
... for 100-300 dollars you can buy an i5 (sandybridge to skylake) system that will have quicksync making it at least double as powerful while using at least a third less power...
Uh-huh, and what exactly would I plug that Sandy Bridge chip into?

I already have the complete system with i7-860 processor, motherboard, DRAM, case, power supply, drives, etc. It's running Blue Iris right now.

Changing the processor alone isn't an option, because the i7-860 is already the fastest processor compatible with its socket. So changing processor means changing motherboard, and changing motherboard means changing the DRAM, and changing mobo/DRAM means changing the power supply... Plus, now I'm supposed to add a video card, too. That's far from a $100-300 upgrade. It's a complete new machine, built from scratch, using parts I don't have.

To be clear, I'm *already* running Blue Iris on this equipment, inside a Windows virtual machine running under FreeBSD, with no graphics card at all (no monitor, either, in fact). It works, it's reliable, but the VM limits Blue Iris to a single CPU core, so the performance headroom is very limited.

So I'll repeat my original question: Will Blue Iris utilize all eight cores/threads if it runs natively under Windows, or is there some limitation that will prevent it? I was hoping for a solid answer before I nuke my entire operating system and virtual machine just to try it out.
 

fenderman

Staff member
Joined
Mar 9, 2014
Messages
36,907
Reaction score
21,290
Uh-huh, and what exactly would I plug that Sandy Bridge chip into?

I already have the complete system with i7-860 processor, motherboard, DRAM, case, power supply, drives, etc. It's running Blue Iris right now.

Changing the processor alone isn't an option, because the i7-860 is already the fastest processor compatible with its socket. So changing processor means changing motherboard, and changing motherboard means changing the DRAM, and changing mobo/DRAM means changing the power supply... Plus, now I'm supposed to add a video card, too. That's far from a $100-300 upgrade. It's a complete new machine, built from scratch, using parts I don't have.

To be clear, I'm *already* running Blue Iris on this equipment, inside a Windows virtual machine running under FreeBSD, with no graphics card at all (no monitor, either, in fact). It works, it's reliable, but the VM limits Blue Iris to a single CPU core, so the performance headroom is very limited.

So I'll repeat my original question: Will Blue Iris utilize all eight cores/threads if it runs natively under Windows, or is there some limitation that will prevent it? I was hoping for a solid answer before I nuke my entire operating system and virtual machine just to try it out.
At this point you can shove it in your ass for all i care. No one said anything about swapping processors....if you would take some time to search this forum rather than rant on like a pompous idiot you would see what I am talking about.
Furthermore what part of "yes, blue iris will" dont your understand? Dont come here acting like an entitled brat.
 
Top