On Thu, Jan 27, 2011 at 3:46 PM, J. Roeleveld <jo...@antarean.org> wrote:
> On Thursday 27 January 2011 21:25:02 Paul Hartman wrote:
>> On Thu, Jan 27, 2011 at 2:15 PM, Nikos Chantziaras <rea...@arcor.de> wrote:
>> > On 01/27/2011 09:41 PM, Dale wrote:
>> >> YoYo Siska wrote:
>> >>> Yes.
>> >>> It might not be perfect, but mostly it works pretty well.
>> >>> Once make started 10 or so process, which ate all my ram, because I
>> >>> forgot to reenable swap, when I was playing with something before that
>> >>>
>> >>> :)
>> >>>
>> >>> yoyo
>> >>
>> >> I noticed the same thing with mine. It used a LOT of ram. I have 4Gbs
>> >> and it was up to about 3Gbs at one point and using some swap as well.
>> >> I'm hoping to max out to 16Gbs as soon as I can. May upgrade to a 6 core
>> >> CPU too.
>> >>
>> >> I wonder how much faster it would be if the work directory is put on
>> >> tmpfs? With 16Gbs, that should work even for OOo.
>> >
>> > Btw, if you're using more instances than the amount of CPUs, the result
>> > will be slow-down.
>> >
>> > With the default kernel scheduler, best if amount of CPUs + 1.  (On a
>> > 4-core, that's -j5).
>>
>> Once, when building my kernel, I accidentally forgot to specify the
>> number of makes and ran "make -j all". That was a really bad idea, the
>> system became totally unresponsive for quite a long time, much longer
>> than normal kernel build time, but it did eventually finish!
>
> I have found that multi-core systems with sufficient memory can handle "-j"
> (no value) a lot better then sindle-core systems. I do on occasion do it with
> the kernel and can still continue using the system. (For comparison, my
> desktop is a 4-core AMD64 with 8GB memory)

Strange, in my case it was an i7 920 (4 cores, hyperthreaded, appears
as 8 CPUs to Linux) with 12GB of RAM. Maybe if I prefixed it
with"nice" it would not have brought my computer to its knees... or
maybe related to the schedulers and other kernel voodoo that I don't
understand. I might try it again someday :)

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