It’s a bottleneck. If you are calculating faster than you can record the results, you have to wait for the write operation to complete before you can do the next calculation.
But what does calculating pi have to do with the disk speed?
Applesause@mander.xyz 19 hours ago
m532@lemmygrad.ml 19 hours ago
They don’t have 100TB of ram to store all the digits, I guess
HK65@sopuli.xyz 17 hours ago
I imagine it’s about checkpointing the calculation as it’s very long.
Point is, if the system crashes, you want to be able to resume the calculation without losing too much progress, so you want to periodically write progress to disk.
That takes some CPU cycles away from the calculation, and if your disk driver is inefficient, it will take away more.
vala@lemmy.dbzer0.com 16 hours ago
AHH ok yeah that does make some sense.
HK65@sopuli.xyz 5 hours ago
The question did too, it isn’t immediately apparent why you’d write to disk to calculate pi if you haven’t worked in a place that churned a lot of numbers before.