On Thu, 15 Sep 2011 11:26:36 -0700, Mark Knecht wrote: > I think you have a specific view that is likely the very best thing to > do for your situation, what ever that is, be it work, office, server > farm. I don't know. I'm guessing however, that in your world machines > are always turned on, burning power, and running cron jobs in those > environment makes lots of sense.
Bear in mind I was saying an unattended cron is my reason FOR doing a separate fetch. > In my world, which is just a lowly home user of Linux for nearly 15 > years now, many of the machines I take care of spend more time turned > off than on. cron jobs don't work when there's no power applied, and > while you can let the machine immediately catch up when the machine is > powered back up, in my world of futures trading I need to control CPU > and network usage to ensure that both downloads and builds don't > impact my opportunity to make a trade and hopefully make some money. > As I write this email I'm currently in my 23rd S&P futures trade of > the day which at this point is just about 5 hours old. Some of these > trades take only a few minutes and likely wouldn't execute correctly > if portage was building KDE. That is a rather different usage, certainly to mine and probably to the OP too. In your situation, where timely and correct updates are so important, I'd be tempted to build packages in a chroot on a less important system and do an emerge -ku world when everything was ready and the time was right. -- Neil Bothwick Dolly Parton-- silicone based life
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