cuda1 Intel Core i9-9900K testing with a Gigabyte B360M AORUS Gaming 3-CF (F11 BIOS) and eVGA NVIDIA GeForce RTX 2060 6GB on Ubuntu 18.04 via the Phoronix Test Suite. cuda1: Processor: Intel Core i9-9900K @ 5.00GHz (8 Cores / 16 Threads), Motherboard: Gigabyte B360M AORUS Gaming 3-CF (F11 BIOS), Chipset: Intel Cannon Lake PCH, Memory: 32GB, Disk: 240GB KINGSTON SA400S3 + 2000GB Seagate ST2000VM003-1CT1 + 2000GB Western Digital WD20EZRX-00D, Graphics: eVGA NVIDIA GeForce RTX 2060 6GB (1365/7000MHz), Audio: Realtek ALC892, Monitor: V206HQL, Network: Intel I219-V OS: Ubuntu 18.04, Kernel: 5.4.0-42-generic (x86_64), Desktop: GNOME Shell 3.28.4, Display Server: X Server 1.20.8, Display Driver: NVIDIA 450.51.06, OpenGL: 4.6.0, OpenCL: OpenCL 1.2 CUDA 11.0.197, Vulkan: 1.2.133, Compiler: GCC 7.5.0 + Clang 6.0.0-1ubuntu2 + LLVM 6.0.0 + CUDA 11.0, File-System: ext4, Screen Resolution: 1366x768 CUDA Mini-Nbody 2015-11-10 Test: Original (NBody^2)/s > Higher Is Better cuda1 . 194.13 |=============================================================== CUDA Mini-Nbody 2015-11-10 Test: Cache Blocking (NBody^2)/s > Higher Is Better cuda1 . 253.78 |=============================================================== CUDA Mini-Nbody 2015-11-10 Test: Loop Unrolling (NBody^2)/s > Higher Is Better cuda1 . 254.15 |=============================================================== CUDA Mini-Nbody 2015-11-10 Test: SOA Data Layout (NBody^2)/s > Higher Is Better cuda1 . 191.49 |=============================================================== CUDA Mini-Nbody 2015-11-10 Test: Flush Denormals To Zero (NBody^2)/s > Higher Is Better cuda1 . 189.73 |===============================================================