On Thursday, 14 September 2023 10:49:35 BST Peter Humphrey wrote:
> On Wednesday, 13 September 2023 16:14:09 BST Michael wrote:
> > I recall this being discussed in a previous thread, but if your CPU has 24
> > threads and you've set:
> >
> > EMERGE_DEFAULT_OPTS="--jobs=4 --load-average=32
> > MAK
On Wednesday, 13 September 2023 16:14:09 BST Michael wrote:
> I recall this being discussed in a previous thread, but if your CPU has 24
> threads and you've set:
>
> EMERGE_DEFAULT_OPTS="--jobs=4 --load-average=32
> MAKEOPTS="-j14"
>
> You will be asking emerge to run up to 4 x 14 = 56 threads,
Hi.
Nothing compares to Chromium (browser) in terms of compilation times. On
my system with 12 core threads it takes about 8 hours to compile - which
is 4 times longer than 10 years ago with 2 core threads ;)
Libreoffice takes a few hours, but less than half of chromium. Nothing
gets close t
On Wednesday, 13 September 2023 13:41:00 BST Peter Humphrey wrote:
> On Wednesday, 13 September 2023 12:50:20 BST Wols Lists wrote:
> > On 13/09/2023 12:28, Peter Humphrey wrote:
> > > A thought on compiling, which I hope some devs will read: I was tempted
> > > to
> > > push the system hard at fir
On Wednesday, 13 September 2023 12:50:20 BST Wols Lists wrote:
> On 13/09/2023 12:28, Peter Humphrey wrote:
> > A thought on compiling, which I hope some devs will read: I was tempted to
> > push the system hard at first, with load average and jobs as high as I
> > thought I could set them. I've co
Am Wed, Sep 13, 2023 at 12:50:20PM +0100 schrieb Wols Lists:
> Bear in mind a lot of systems are thermally limited and can't run at full
> pelt anyway ...
Usually those are space-constrained systems like mini PCs or laptops.
Typical Desktops shouldn’t be limited; even the stock CPU coolers shoul
On 13/09/2023 12:28, Peter Humphrey wrote:
A thought on compiling, which I hope some devs will read: I was tempted to
push the system hard at first, with load average and jobs as high as I thought
I could set them. I've come to believe, though, that job control by portage
and /usr/bin/make is wea
On Tuesday, 12 September 2023 22:08:49 BST Wol wrote:
> There's all sorts of tricks, some work for some people, others work for
> others.
Quite so. Here I have two swap partitions: 8GB priority 20 on NVME and 50GB
priority 10 on SSD. I've never noticed either of them being used, so I suppose
I
On 11/09/2023 20:46, Alan McKinnon wrote:
qtwebengine! yes that one took forever also. It also said my 16G of RAM
was smaller than the 16G it needed. Weird.
Anyways I enabled a swapfile and left it to run overnight
16GB physical ram <> 16GB usable ram for the compile ...
I concur with others
Le mar. 12 sept. 2023, 12:14, Peter Humphrey a
écrit :
> On Monday, 11 September 2023 22:22:28 BST Michael wrote:
>
> > There's also the option of using bin alternatives where available, e.g.
> > google-chrome, firefox-bin, libreoffice-bin.
>
> ...and rust-bin, which is now the default in at leas
On Monday, 11 September 2023 22:22:28 BST Michael wrote:
> There's also the option of using bin alternatives where available, e.g.
> google-chrome, firefox-bin, libreoffice-bin.
...and rust-bin, which is now the default in at least some desktop profiles.
--
Regards,
Peter.
On Tue, Sep 12, 2023 at 1:05 AM Ramon Fischer
wrote:
> You may also want to take a look at "distcc", with which you can set up
> compiler farms; this can be even combined with "ccache":
>
> https://wiki.gentoo.org/wiki/Distcc#With_ccache
>
> -Ramon
>
Hi Ramon,
distcc is way more than I ne
You may also want to take a look at "distcc", with which you can set up
compiler farms; this can be even combined with "ccache":
https://wiki.gentoo.org/wiki/Distcc#With_ccache
-Ramon
On 11/09/2023 23:46, Alan McKinnon wrote:
On Mon, Sep 11, 2023 at 11:23 PM Michael wrote:
On Mond
On Mon, Sep 11, 2023 at 11:23 PM Michael wrote:
> On Monday, 11 September 2023 21:21:47 BST Alan McKinnon wrote:
> > On Mon, Sep 11, 2023 at 10:05 PM Neil Bothwick
> wrote:
> > > On Mon, 11 Sep 2023 21:19:27 +0200, Alan McKinnon wrote:
> > > > chromium has been building since 10:14, it's now 21:
On Monday, 11 September 2023 21:21:47 BST Alan McKinnon wrote:
> On Mon, Sep 11, 2023 at 10:05 PM Neil Bothwick wrote:
> > On Mon, 11 Sep 2023 21:19:27 +0200, Alan McKinnon wrote:
> > > chromium has been building since 10:14, it's now 21:16 and still going
> > > so 9 hours at least on this machine
On Mon, Sep 11, 2023 at 10:05 PM Neil Bothwick wrote:
> On Mon, 11 Sep 2023 21:19:27 +0200, Alan McKinnon wrote:
>
> > chromium has been building since 10:14, it's now 21:16 and still going
> > so 9 hours at least on this machine to build a browser - almost as bad
> > as openoffice at it's worst
On Mon, 11 Sep 2023 21:19:27 +0200, Alan McKinnon wrote:
> chromium has been building since 10:14, it's now 21:16 and still going
> so 9 hours at least on this machine to build a browser - almost as bad
> as openoffice at it's worst (regularly took 12 hours). Nodejs also took
> a while, but I didn
qtwebengine! yes that one took forever also. It also said my 16G of RAM was
smaller than the 16G it needed. Weird.
Anyways I enabled a swapfile and left it to run overnight
Alan
On Mon, Sep 11, 2023 at 9:31 PM Dale wrote:
> Alan McKinnon wrote:
>
> After my long time away from Gentoo, I though
In addition to the reference to "qlop":
$ qlop ungoogled-chromium | tail
2022-08-04T19:58:22 >>> www-client/ungoogled-chromium: 9:06:54
2022-08-05T14:27:44 >>> www-client/ungoogled-chromium: 16:19:06
2022-08-25T11:45:37 >>> www-client/ungoogled-chromium: 8:01:54
2022-09-01T10:
Hi Alan,
just quick and dirty, I am too tired for formalities. :) The following
list contains packages, that may be too big for tmpfs and are most
probably very time consuming to compile:
$ < /etc/portage/package.env/no_tmpfs.conf
# custom - 20181121 - rfischer: list packages, which a
Chromium and qtwebengine have the longest build times that I have
encountered
On Tue, 12 Sep 2023 at 1:01 AM, Dale wrote:
> Alan McKinnon wrote:
>
> After my long time away from Gentoo, I thought perhaps some packages that
> always took ages to compile would have improved. I needed to change to
Alan McKinnon wrote:
> After my long time away from Gentoo, I thought perhaps some packages
> that always took ages to compile would have improved. I needed to
> change to ~amd64 anyway (dumb n00b mistake leaving it at amd64). So
> that's what I did and let emerge do it's thing.
>
> chromium has be
After my long time away from Gentoo, I thought perhaps some packages that
always took ages to compile would have improved. I needed to change to
~amd64 anyway (dumb n00b mistake leaving it at amd64). So that's what I did
and let emerge do it's thing.
chromium has been building since 10:14, it's no
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