Re: [gentoo-user] content of /usr/portage/distfile
Alex wrote: Now I'm emerging -e world with -Os. When it is finished, I'll mail you the results. Hi, now I have a -Os-system and it isn't faster. So now I'll emerge the whole system again, but with -O3. Alex -- gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list
Re: [gentoo-user] content of /usr/portage/distfile
Allan Gottlieb wrote: You have to do experiments. It depends heavily on your application mix. Yes, that would be the best, but I'm wondering how, because e.g. time bzip2 -9 foobar wouldn't be helpfull. So now I've switched to -Os and soon I can test, if it's a real difference. Thank you! Alex -- gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list
Re: [gentoo-user] content of /usr/portage/distfile
At Thu, 25 May 2006 10:40:26 + Alex [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: Allan Gottlieb wrote: You have to do experiments. It depends heavily on your application mix. Yes, that would be the best, but I'm wondering how, because e.g. time bzip2 -9 foobar wouldn't be helpfull. So now I've switched to -Os and soon I can test, if it's a real difference. Please report back your findings, including the application mix you tested. Although scientific timed benchmarks are important, I would also be interested in how the system feels. For the latter (feels), you should qualitatively describe the use of the system (web server, desktop, laptop, etc) and what you commonly run (program devel, games, scientific/engineering apps, etc). thanks, allan -- gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list
Re: [gentoo-user] content of /usr/portage/distfile
Philip Webb wrote: My experience is that 'eclean' is not efficient at removing things, so I've gone back to removing out-of-date distfiles by hand. Not even 'eclean-dist --destructive' is enough? Benno -- gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list
Re: [gentoo-user] content of /usr/portage/distfile
Allan Gottlieb wrote: At Thu, 25 May 2006 10:40:26 + Alex [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: Allan Gottlieb wrote: You have to do experiments. It depends heavily on your application mix. Yes, that would be the best, but I'm wondering how, because e.g. time bzip2 -9 foobar wouldn't be helpfull. So now I've switched to -Os and soon I can test, if it's a real difference. Please report back your findings, including the application mix you tested. Although scientific timed benchmarks are important, I would also be interested in how the system feels. For the latter (feels), you should qualitatively describe the use of the system (web server, desktop, laptop, etc) and what you commonly run (program devel, games, scientific/engineering apps, etc). thanks, allan Hi, I've a desktop system and I commonly use applications like firefox, thunderbird and so on, kde, gaim and a terminal is nearly always there. Sometimes I'm running vim or kate. If you're interested in some tests, not relevant for desktop systems, there are some I made: Time wasted to compress a 416 mb tar: bzip2 gzip -O3 2m40.882s 1m20.445s -Os 2m39.314s 1m21.157s decompress: bzip2 gzip -O3 0m52.575s 0m4.972s -Os 0m53.387s 0m4.828s Convert 203 Mbs MP3s to WAV using LAME: -O3 14m4.461s -Os 16m50.599s from wav to mp3: -O3 1m1.708s -Os 1m12.841s Now I'm emerging -e world with -Os. When it is finished, I'll mail you the results. Alex -- gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list
Re: [gentoo-user] content of /usr/portage/distfile
At Thu, 25 May 2006 18:21:39 + Alex [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: Allan Gottlieb wrote: At Thu, 25 May 2006 10:40:26 + Alex [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: Allan Gottlieb wrote: You have to do experiments. It depends heavily on your application mix. Yes, that would be the best, but I'm wondering how, because e.g. time bzip2 -9 foobar wouldn't be helpfull. So now I've switched to -Os and soon I can test, if it's a real difference. Please report back your findings, including the application mix you tested. Although scientific timed benchmarks are important, I would also be interested in how the system feels. For the latter (feels), you should qualitatively describe the use of the system (web server, desktop, laptop, etc) and what you commonly run (program devel, games, scientific/engineering apps, etc). thanks, allan Hi, I've a desktop system and I commonly use applications like firefox, thunderbird and so on, kde, gaim and a terminal is nearly always there. Sometimes I'm running vim or kate. If you're interested in some tests, not relevant for desktop systems, there are some I made: Time wasted to compress a 416 mb tar: bzip2 gzip -O3 2m40.882s 1m20.445s -Os 2m39.314s 1m21.157s decompress: bzip2 gzip -O3 0m52.575s 0m4.972s -Os 0m53.387s 0m4.828s Convert 203 Mbs MP3s to WAV using LAME: -O3 14m4.461s -Os 16m50.599s from wav to mp3: -O3 1m1.708s -Os 1m12.841s Now I'm emerging -e world with -Os. When it is finished, I'll mail you the results. The conversion programs you ran might not stress the memory system. I suspect that they only keep a fixed size portion of the input and output files in memory when you run them with ever larger inputs. allan -- gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list
Re: [gentoo-user] content of /usr/portage/distfile
On Wednesday, 24 May 2006 23:56, JC Denton wrote: Hi! May be it is a stupid question, but can I remove the content of /usr/portage/distfile/ without problems? This file has a size of 1.5 GB ! I would like to have some space back ;) JC Yes you may safely remove anything that you no longer need or want from /usr/portage/distfiles/ If anything you deleted is later required by portage it will be downloaded automatically. -- Raymond Lewis Rebbeck -- gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list
Re: [gentoo-user] content of /usr/portage/distfile
I think you meant /usr/portage/distfiles, right? Yes, you can remove them. They are the source archives of the packages you've installed. But, if you need to reemerge any of your packages, you'll have to download it again. PS.: JC Denton is from Deus Ex? On 5/24/06, JC Denton [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: Hi! May be it is a stupid question, but can I remove the content of /usr/portage/distfile/ without problems? This file has a size of 1.5 GB ! I would like to have some space back ;) JC Mails löschen war gestern: Yahoo! Mail jetzt mit 1GB kostenlosem Speicher . -- gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list
Re: [gentoo-user] content of /usr/portage/distfile
JC Denton a gentiment tapote: Hi! May be it is a stupid question, but can I remove the content of /usr/portage/distfile/ without problems? This file has a size of 1.5 GB ! I would like to have some space back ;) JC Mails löschen war gestern: Yahoo! Mail jetzt mit 1GB kostenlosem Speicher http://de.rd.yahoo.com/evt=39056/*http://de.benefits.yahoo.com. Hi, Yes, no problem. However, if you have to re-emerge a package, you'll have to re-download it. Regards. - Ptitjack - ^ ^^^ ^ ( 0 0 ) \/ ---- -- gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list
Re: [gentoo-user] content of /usr/portage/distfile
On Wed, 24 May 2006 16:26:43 +0200 (CEST), JC Denton wrote: May be it is a stupid question, but can I remove the content of /usr/portage/distfile/ without problems? This file has a size of 1.5 GB ! I would like to have some space back ;) Yes you can, but it may mean you have to download files again if you install minor updates to existing packages. You can use eclean, in the latest gentoolkit, to remove only files that no longer belong to installed packages. -- Neil Bothwick BBS: (n.) a system for connecting computers and exchanging gossip, facts, and uninformed speculation under false names. signature.asc Description: PGP signature
Re: [gentoo-user] content of /usr/portage/distfile
Yes! I think it is a great game.Raphael Melo de Oliveira Bastos Sales [EMAIL PROTECTED] schrieb: I think you meant /usr/portage/distfiles, right? Yes, you can removethem. They are the source archives of the packages you've installed.But, if you need to reemerge any of your packages, you'll have todownload it again.PS.: JC Denton is from Deus Ex?On 5/24/06, JC Denton wrote: Hi! May be it is a stupid question, but can I remove the content of /usr/portage/distfile/ without problems? This file has a size of 1.5 GB ! I would like to have some space back ;) JC Mails löschen war gestern: Yahoo! Mail jetzt mit 1GB kostenlosem Speicher .-- gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list Mit Yahoo! Mail SpamGuard lesen Sie nur die Mails, die Sie auch wirklich lesen wollen.
Re: [gentoo-user] content of /usr/portage/distfile
Hi, There is a utility called eclean which is meant for the purpose .. http://gentoo-wiki.com/TIP_Free_up_disk_space_in_Gentoo Hope this helps Mark -- gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list
Re: [gentoo-user] content of /usr/portage/distfile
Hi, znx wrote: http://gentoo-wiki.com/TIP_Free_up_disk_space_in_Gentoo Using CFLAGS=-Os or CFLAGS=-O2 is much more effective on a desktop system and can shave off more than 30% of the size. This is because larger binaries (like the HUGE ones produced by -O3) take longer to load, and occupy more RAM. Is that always true? I mean, I'm not loading and unloading applications the whole time. Additionally I've enough RAM for all applications I use and so I can't imagine that (on my computer with my use) applications, which are slower and smaller, can be faster than applications which are bigger and faster. Please correct my, if I'm not right. Thanks. Alex -- gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list
Re: [gentoo-user] content of /usr/portage/distfile
At Wed, 24 May 2006 20:52:21 + Alex [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: Hi, znx wrote: http://gentoo-wiki.com/TIP_Free_up_disk_space_in_Gentoo Using CFLAGS=-Os or CFLAGS=-O2 is much more effective on a desktop system and can shave off more than 30% of the size. This is because larger binaries (like the HUGE ones produced by -O3) take longer to load, and occupy more RAM. Is that always true? I mean, I'm not loading and unloading applications the whole time. Additionally I've enough RAM for all applications I use and so I can't imagine that (on my computer with my use) applications, which are slower and smaller, can be faster than applications which are bigger and faster. Often the bigger problem with large binaries is that their working sets exceeds the sizes of the L1 and (possibly) L2 caches. So, you may well be right that your gigabytes of RAM greatly reduce disk access to load and demand page applications, you may still get a slowdown due to cache misses. Central memory, which is the fast small storage when considering demand paging, is the large but slow storage when considering caching. allan -- gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list
Re: [gentoo-user] content of /usr/portage/distfile
On 5/24/06, Alex [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: Using CFLAGS=-Os or CFLAGS=-O2 is much more effective on a desktop system and can shave off more than 30% of the size. This is because larger binaries (like the HUGE ones produced by -O3) take longer to load, and occupy more RAM. Is that always true? I mean, I'm not loading and unloading applications the whole time. Additionally I've enough RAM for all applications I use and so I can't imagine that (on my computer with my use) applications, which are slower and smaller, can be faster than applications which are bigger and faster. It depends entirely on the application and processor. Compared to -O2, somethings are faster with -Os and some things are slower. Same with -O3. It can even depend upon the options given to an app, for example bzip2 -9 will be faster with one level of optimization than with another, while bzip2 -1 can give the complete opposite results. I chose -Os for my system, but only after testing the things that I care most about (compression, dm-crypt encryption, some media encoding) to see what was best overall. But even that was a comprimise, and the real deciding factor was that it took a lot less time to compile with -Os compared to -O3. -Richard -- gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list
Re: [gentoo-user] content of /usr/portage/distfile
Allan Gottlieb wrote: Often the bigger problem with large binaries is that their working sets exceeds the sizes of the L1 and (possibly) L2 caches. Well, I'm using -O3 and I have 1Mb L2, do you think I should migrate to -Os? Richard Fish wrote: the real deciding factor was that it took a lot less time to compile with -Os compared to -O3. The time I need to compile isn't my problem, and if it would, I think I could easy use -O0 ;) BTW, is gcc 4.1 faster than 3.4? I've some benchmarks about gcc4, but not compared with 3.4. Alex -- gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list
Re: [gentoo-user] content of /usr/portage/distfile
060524 znx wrote: There is a utility called eclean which is meant for the purpose .. http://gentoo-wiki.com/TIP_Free_up_disk_space_in_Gentoo My experience is that 'eclean' is not efficient at removing things, so I've gone back to removing out-of-date distfiles by hand. -- ,, SUPPORT ___//___, Philip Webb : [EMAIL PROTECTED] ELECTRIC /] [] [] [] [] []| Centre for Urban Community Studies TRANSIT`-O--O---' University of Toronto -- gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list
Re: [gentoo-user] content of /usr/portage/distfile
At Wed, 24 May 2006 23:24:50 + Alex [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: Allan Gottlieb wrote: Often the bigger problem with large binaries is that their working sets exceeds the sizes of the L1 and (possibly) L2 caches. Well, I'm using -O3 and I have 1Mb L2, do you think I should migrate to -Os? You have to do experiments. It depends heavily on your application mix. allan -- gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list