also sprach dman <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> [2002.01.06.2127 +0100]: > | i even went as far as to renice xmms to -20 *and* > | rsync/bzip/gzip/make-kpkg to 20, but it doesn't really help. > > Well, kernel compilation is very CPU intensive, and bzip2 can do lots > of computation as well. What you have is several (not just two) CPU > intensive processes going, and one process that needs real-time CPU > access. Unix is a time-sharing, but not real-time OS. xmms just gets > lucky if it doesn't skip. This is true for the general case of any > process that needs real-time-like scheduling. Of course, the less > load you have on your machine the more likely it is that xmms will be > scheduled often enough.
but any process with nice value -20 should take absolut precedence over other processes at higher nice levels, especially when the resource-hog-process runs at nice level +20!!! somehow this strikes me as *wrong*. heck, even windoze NT could do that better... > That load average you have is way higher than mine is, except for when > I'm doing a lot of development (compiling/running some java stuff, > which is when xmms has trouble for me). The system is still quite > responsive for non-real-time and non-cpu-intensive activities (like > reading/writing email). mine isn't. and this was when all i was doing is rsync on the local network (no ssh) and playing from xmms. -- martin; (greetings from the heart of the sun.) \____ echo mailto: !#^."<*>"|tr "<*> mailto:" [EMAIL PROTECTED] chaos reigns within. reflect, repent, reboot. order shall return.
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