ma 15.6.2026 klo 0.43 Samuel Thibault ([email protected]) kirjoitti:
>
> Martin-Éric Racine, le sam. 13 juin 2026 11:36:48 +0300, a ecrit:
> > su 7.6.2026 klo 18.38 Samuel Thibault ([email protected]) kirjoitti:
> > > Martin-Éric Racine, le sam. 06 juin 2026 10:48:17 +0300, a ecrit:
> > > > The Debian host on which I test Hurd is dual-boot (Linux/Testing,
> > > > Hurd/Unstable). Running 'apt-get update' takes about one minute on
> > > > Linux, but a full hour on Hurd.
> > >
> > > That's not happening here at all, and there is no reason why it should
> > > be *that* long.
> > >
> > > We'd need **way** more details about your setup and observations to be
> > > able to provide any insight as in why it is happening so on your box.
> > > Otherwise you are just asking for divination.
> >
> > What else do you need?
>
> For trivial starters, whether you are running natively or within a VM
> (with hardware acceleration or not?), what step exactly is taking so
> long (e.g. is that the download that takes long or the "Reading package
> lists" step), and what shows up in top: is cpu time being eating, by
> which process, etc.

I already said a dual-boot host, so it should be obvious that it's
running natively on real x86 hardware.

'sudo apt-get update' is taking 2 minutes tops to complete when
booting off the Linux partition, but a whole hour when booting off the
Hurd partition.

Martin-Éric

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