lzc also flushes the script (compiler) cache by default every time it is run. You can suppress that behavior by adding this arg to lzc

--keepscriptcache ( I think it is called)



On 11/18/05, Pablo Kang <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
You're probably taking a hit with the JVM loading every time you run lzc.

pablo

On Fri, 18 Nov 2005, Scott Evans wrote:

> I'm in the midst of moving our build process to use lzc and produce a
> standalone .swf file every time -- instead of doing the in-place type of
> recompiles that you get through the OLS.
>
> But what I'm seeing so far is that rebuilds seem slower than they do
> through a browser.  *Something* is pegging the CPU for a while during the
> process, even if no files have changed.  My source files get replaced on
> the disk (we shuttle all our files off to a build location), but I keep
> their timestamps, so as far as caching mechanisms go, the files should
> look identical.
>
> My lzc invocation is:
>   lzc --mcache on --keepscriptcache --runtime=swf7 main.lzx
>
> Ideas?
>
>
>
> gse
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>
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--
Henry Minsky
Software Architect
[EMAIL PROTECTED]

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