Am 19.05.2014 um 01:31 schrieb David Brownlee <[email protected]>: > Currently the system runs 'makemandb -Q' in the background on every boot. > This updates the apropos database (for 'man -k'). > > On an system with an existing man database this will stat(2) every manpage > and update /var/db/man.db (an around 18MB sqlite database on a new amd64 > system, maybe around 40MB on the same system with a reasonable selection of > packages) > > On a modern system rich in disk, memory and CPU this is unnoticeable. On a > slower system (mac68k, vax, embedded 486), this renders the system > effectively unusable for some time. > > Given that makemandb is run nightly and weekly by cron anyway, it would > probably be best for those systems to not have makemandb run on boot. > > My first thought would be to allow setting it in sysinst, with a per port - > default on for i386, amd64, modern (arm, powerpc, mips), off for others. > > What do people think? >
What say does make sense to me. I run several small machines and I also suffer from this effect. Maybe the behaviour would better be defined in /etc/rc.conf (with sensible per-port default values)? - mb
