F5F Stay Refreshed Software Operating Systems The GPU-accelerated virus scans have largely stopped due to reduced threat activity and performance limitations.

The GPU-accelerated virus scans have largely stopped due to reduced threat activity and performance limitations.

The GPU-accelerated virus scans have largely stopped due to reduced threat activity and performance limitations.

R
ReDeR_Games
Member
194
03-31-2016, 04:08 PM
#1
In 2009, kaspersky claimed to be developing virus scans using GPU acceleration. The details of what actually occurred are unclear.
R
ReDeR_Games
03-31-2016, 04:08 PM #1

In 2009, kaspersky claimed to be developing virus scans using GPU acceleration. The details of what actually occurred are unclear.

B
B_Mathias99
Member
70
03-31-2016, 09:24 PM
#2
It's Kaspersky, but it seems to be failing. Likely it won't work at all.
B
B_Mathias99
03-31-2016, 09:24 PM #2

It's Kaspersky, but it seems to be failing. Likely it won't work at all.

A
AntonTheMiner
Member
61
04-01-2016, 12:17 AM
#3
It seems the solid state drive is currently the main constraint.
A
AntonTheMiner
04-01-2016, 12:17 AM #3

It seems the solid state drive is currently the main constraint.

M
Miltonmatt
Member
57
04-18-2016, 02:39 AM
#4
M
Miltonmatt
04-18-2016, 02:39 AM #4

S
Sykesa
Junior Member
27
04-18-2016, 09:38 AM
#5
Virus detection mainly relies on decision trees to identify patterns or specific byte sequences. This represents the least efficient path for GPU processing since GPUs struggle with highly branching code. It seems the approach may have failed or been too slow. Modern antivirus software consumes significant CPU resources, making optimization worthwhile—but it's uncertain whether GPU acceleration would make a noticeable difference.
S
Sykesa
04-18-2016, 09:38 AM #5

Virus detection mainly relies on decision trees to identify patterns or specific byte sequences. This represents the least efficient path for GPU processing since GPUs struggle with highly branching code. It seems the approach may have failed or been too slow. Modern antivirus software consumes significant CPU resources, making optimization worthwhile—but it's uncertain whether GPU acceleration would make a noticeable difference.

F
fwkenxz
Member
64
04-20-2016, 03:25 PM
#6
It's hard to see the value unless you're reading quickly from a disk. Most CPUs can handle a drive's bus many times over without much trouble, so a GPU won't really make a difference. If you compile a huge number of viruses, it might help.
F
fwkenxz
04-20-2016, 03:25 PM #6

It's hard to see the value unless you're reading quickly from a disk. Most CPUs can handle a drive's bus many times over without much trouble, so a GPU won't really make a difference. If you compile a huge number of viruses, it might help.