In my case this does help ldconfig -SP /usr/bin /usr/sbin /usr/local/bin /usr/local/sbin /usr/X11R6/bin
and has never been a problem 2008/4/8, Dale Rahn <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>: > On Tue, Apr 08, 2008 at 04:34:49PM +0200, Zbigniew Baniewski wrote: > > > On Tue, Apr 08, 2008 at 02:51:32PM +0200, Dusty wrote: > > > > > I use Seamonkey. It works. > > > Why use Seamonkey? It is more resource friendly than running > > > Firefox+Thunderbird+whatever. > > > > Both are starting in about the same - long - time: 20 seconds... :/ > > (Pentium II 400, 256 MB RAM, SATA drive, OpenBSD 4.2) > > > > Perhaps someone could make a tip, how could I make that start-up period > > shorter? Yes, I know: "buy new hardware". Any other available solutions? > > > > There should be the other ones; on the NetBSD 3.1 Firefox is ready to work > > in about 4 seconds... quite a difference, isn't it? > > -- > > pozdrawiam / regards > > > > Zbigniew Baniewski > > > > > There is a system already present in OpenBSD called prebind (see ldconfig(8)) > that does this type of speedup, however the ports integration was never > finished. Most of the issue with ports was that the mechanism used modifies > the md5 values for each binary and library. If the md5 package checking > mechanism could detect the prebind data and 'ignore' it, then the md5 values > could be verified. > > While no problems with the full system scan of prebind, the update mode > (which ports would use) may have had a problem. > > > Dale Rahn [EMAIL PROTECTED]