Good question I didn't time it since I started it and then went off to do other stuff. It's a Pi 3 Model B: 1 GB RAM, 1.2GHz, 64-bit quad core CPU.
I think tests took closer to 4 minutes? Most of that was HLL. KLL is the next slowest test and I'm pretty sure that took 15s. The kit I ordered is the one from Piper (playpiper.com but it's light on technical details there) and I had a terminal open in the GUI. Not sure how much other stuff the OS was doing in the background (probably not much?) or how much memory other tasks were taking. It's designed primarily as a teaching system for kids, after all. jon On Sat, Jun 20, 2020 at 1:09 AM David Cromberge < [email protected]> wrote: > I agree, that’s very cool! > > Out of interest, what are the specs for the raspberry Pi and what was the > compilation time like? > > On 20 Jun 2020, at 07:23, leerho <[email protected]> wrote: > > Now that is COOL! > > On Fri, Jun 19, 2020 at 11:11 PM Jon Malkin <[email protected]> wrote: > >> I got a Raspberry Pi-based computer kit for the child. And what's the >> first thing you do when you find that your (kid's) new toy has easy access >> to a linux terminal with dev tools? Checkout, build, and test your open >> source project, of course. >> >> Not surprising as it's running some gcc 6 suite on linux, but after I got >> cmake installed everything compiled and tested just fine. So we have now >> officially and successfully tested our library on a pi! >> >> jon >> > -- > From my cell phone. > >
