On 1600AF with 16G RAM and nvme drive it took ~ 38 hours, if you were
running all 4 builds (as test.sh does), you can still finish the tests by
running only the remaining build steps.
You can send me even partial results and I'll let you know if your times
are expected or not (it should be very si
On Wed, Mar 18, 2020 at 08:09 AM, Mike Looijmans wrote:
>
> Of course he's on a tight budget. He wouldn't need to ask for advice
> otherwise...
When has a company ever given you a card blanche for equipment? :D
There is a budget and I just need to write down a good argument to spend it on
some
On Wed, Mar 18, 2020 at 08:38 AM, Martin Jansa wrote:
>
>
> If you want to compare how terrible your current VM compares with some
> other builders, you can use:
> https://github.com/shr-project/test-oe-build-time
Thanks for all the replies here, had some long days so no earlier answers.
I did
On Fri, Mar 20, 2020 at 03:58:35PM +0100, Mike Looijmans wrote:
>...
> (because octave is virtually impossible to cross-compile).
>...
The recipe in meta-openembedded cross-compiles without problem.
cu
Adrian
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> Cc: yocto@lists.yoctoproject.org<mailto:yocto@lists.yoctoproject.org>
> Subject: Re: [yocto] What are the key factors for yocto build speed
On 19-03-2020 18:21, Adrian Bunk wrote:
On Thu, Mar 19, 2020 at 05:07:17PM +0100, Mike Looijmans wrote:
...
With both parallelization options
to "16", I might end up with 16 compile tasks running 16 compile threads
each, i.e. 256 running processes.
...
This is a bug:
http://bugzilla.yoctoproje
On Thu, Mar 19, 2020 at 9:07 AM Mike Looijmans wrote:
>
> On 19-03-2020 12:04, Richard Purdie via Lists.Yoctoproject.Org wrote:
> >> , fetch, configure, package and rootfs tasks.
> >
> > Sadly these tasks are much harder.
>
> It would be really great if some sort of "weight" could be attached to a
Le jeu. 19 mars 2020 à 18:04, Richard Purdie <
richard.pur...@linuxfoundation.org> a écrit :
> On Thu, 2020-03-19 at 17:29 +0100, Yann Dirson wrote:
> >
> >
> > Le jeu. 19 mars 2020 à 17:07, Mike Looijmans
> a écrit :
> > > On 19-03-2020 12:04, Richard Purdie via Lists.Yoctoproject.Org wrote:
> >
On Thu, 2020-03-19 at 19:21 +0200, Adrian Bunk wrote:
> On Thu, Mar 19, 2020 at 05:07:17PM +0100, Mike Looijmans wrote:
> > ...
> > With both parallelization options
> > to "16", I might end up with 16 compile tasks running 16 compile
> > threads
> > each, i.e. 256 running processes.
> > ...
>
> T
On Thu, Mar 19, 2020 at 05:07:17PM +0100, Mike Looijmans wrote:
>...
> With both parallelization options
> to "16", I might end up with 16 compile tasks running 16 compile threads
> each, i.e. 256 running processes.
>...
This is a bug:
http://bugzilla.yoctoproject.org/show_bug.cgi?id=13306
I some
On Thu, 2020-03-19 at 17:29 +0100, Yann Dirson wrote:
>
>
> Le jeu. 19 mars 2020 à 17:07, Mike Looijmans a
> écrit :
> > On 19-03-2020 12:04, Richard Purdie via Lists.Yoctoproject.Org wrote:
> > >> , fetch, configure, package and rootfs tasks.
> > >
> > > Sadly these tasks are much harder.
> >
Le jeu. 19 mars 2020 à 17:07, Mike Looijmans a
écrit :
> On 19-03-2020 12:04, Richard Purdie via Lists.Yoctoproject.Org wrote:
> >> , fetch, configure, package and rootfs tasks.
> >
> > Sadly these tasks are much harder.
>
> It would be really great if some sort of "weight" could be attached to a
On 19-03-2020 12:04, Richard Purdie via Lists.Yoctoproject.Org wrote:
, fetch, configure, package and rootfs tasks.
Sadly these tasks are much harder.
It would be really great if some sort of "weight" could be attached to a
task. This relates to memory usage.
My system has 16 cores but onl
On Thu, 2020-03-19 at 11:43 +, mikko.rap...@bmw.de wrote:
> On Thu, Mar 19, 2020 at 11:04:26AM +, Richard Purdie wrote:
> > Recipe parsing should hit 100% CPU, its one of the few places we
> > can do
> > that.
>
> I'm not fully aware what bitbake does before starting task execution.
> With
On Thu, Mar 19, 2020 at 11:04:26AM +, Richard Purdie wrote:
> On Thu, 2020-03-19 at 08:05 +, Mikko Rapeli wrote:
> > Once this is done, IO still happens when anything calls sync() and
> > fsync() and worst offenders are package management tools. In yocto
> > builds, package manager actions
On Thu, 2020-03-19 at 08:05 +, Mikko Rapeli wrote:
> Once this is done, IO still happens when anything calls sync() and
> fsync() and worst offenders are package management tools. In yocto
> builds, package manager actions to flush to disk are always useless
> since rootfs images are going to b
On Wed, Mar 18, 2020 at 10:56:50PM +, Ross Burton wrote:
> On 18/03/2020 14:09, Mike Looijmans wrote:
> > Harddisk speed has very little impact on your build time. It helps with
> > the "setscene" parts, but doesn't affect actual compile time at all. I
> > recall someone did a build from RAM di
t.Org
Sent: Wednesday, March 18, 2020 11:52 AM
To: mike.looijm...@topic.nl <mailto:mike.looijm...@topic.nl>
Cc: yocto@lists.yoctoproject.org <mailto:yocto@lists.yoctoproject.org>
Subject: Re: [yocto] What are the key factors for yocto build speed?
On Wed, Mar 18, 2020 at 04:09:39PM +010
On 18/03/2020 14:09, Mike Looijmans wrote:
Harddisk speed has very little impact on your build time. It helps with
the "setscene" parts, but doesn't affect actual compile time at all. I
recall someone did a build from RAM disks only on a rig, and it was only
about 1 minute faster on a one hour
@lists.yoctoproject.org
Subject: Re: Re: [yocto] What are the key factors for yocto build speed?
4 hours seems extremely long to me for a 8 core system, but I have not tried
this in a while. Were you removing all the sources and re-downloading them for
every build?
From: mailto:yocto
oading
> them for every build?
>
>
>
> *From: * on behalf of Srini <
> rsriniva...@abiomed.com>
> *Date: *Wednesday, March 18, 2020 at 10:13 AM
> *To: *"mikko.rap...@bmw.de" , "
> mike.looijm...@topic.nl"
> *Cc: *"yocto@lists.yoctoproject.org
ijm...@topic.nl"
Cc: "yocto@lists.yoctoproject.org"
Subject: Re: Re: [yocto] What are the key factors for yocto build speed?
My own experience (pardon me if already discussed)
Fought the build times for several months - ending up eventually at 8 cores
(but specifying 16 threads i
-
From: yocto@lists.yoctoproject.org On Behalf Of
Mikko Rapeli via Lists.Yoctoproject.Org
Sent: Wednesday, March 18, 2020 11:52 AM
To: mike.looijm...@topic.nl
Cc: yocto@lists.yoctoproject.org
Subject: Re: [yocto] What are the key factors for yocto build speed?
On Wed, Mar 18, 2020 at 04:09:39PM
On Wed, Mar 18, 2020 at 04:09:39PM +0100, Mike Looijmans wrote:
> On 18-03-2020 15:49, Adrian Bunk via Lists.Yoctoproject.Org wrote:
> > On Wed, Mar 18, 2020 at 10:12:26AM -0400, Jean-Marie Lemetayer wrote:
> > > ...
> > > For example one of our build servers is using:
> > > - AMD Ryzen 9 3900X
> >
On Wed, Mar 18, 2020 at 05:52:37AM -0700, Oliver Westermann wrote:
> Hey,
>
> We're currently using a VM on Windows and it's a lot slower than the native
> linux build (which is expected).
> We're looking into getting a dedicated build server for our team (basically a
> self-build tower PC). Any
On 18-03-2020 15:49, Adrian Bunk via Lists.Yoctoproject.Org wrote:
On Wed, Mar 18, 2020 at 10:12:26AM -0400, Jean-Marie Lemetayer wrote:
...
For example one of our build servers is using:
- AMD Ryzen 9 3900X
...
- 32Go DDR4 3200 MHZ CL14
...
It is a really good price / build time ratio configura
On Wed, Mar 18, 2020 at 10:12:26AM -0400, Jean-Marie Lemetayer wrote:
>...
> For example one of our build servers is using:
> - AMD Ryzen 9 3900X
>...
> - 32Go DDR4 3200 MHZ CL14
>...
> It is a really good price / build time ratio configuration.
Depends on what you are building.
Building non-triv
On 18-03-2020 15:09, Mike Looijmans via Lists.Yoctoproject.Org wrote:
Big ryzen is a good choice.
My home rig is a Ryzen 1900, with only 8GB RAM. It's way faster at OE
yocto builds than the i7 at work that has 32GB RAM installed.
Sorry - wrong number. My rig does not have a 1900, but an "AMD
I have to say that AMD aggressively pursuing core count increase on
consumer level CPUs is awesome news for the YP. Previously, you had to buy
some hugely overpriced Xeons or similar to be able to work efficiently, or
rely on CI doing builds for you which makes interactive development
complicated.
Hi,
In my company we have tested some "big Ryzen" configurations to speed up Yocto
builds.
The conclusion of these tests is that the build time is almost only related to
the CPU score: https://www.cpubenchmark.net/high_end_cpus.html
The speed (overclock) and size of the RAM does not influence
Big ryzen is a good choice.
My home rig is a Ryzen 1900, with only 8GB RAM. It's way faster at OE
yocto builds than the i7 at work that has 32GB RAM installed. My 8GB rig
does not use swap space while building huge images (like satellite
receivers and full-blown XFCE desktops).
For the CPU,
On Wed, 18 Mar 2020 at 13:01, Mikko Rapeli wrote:
>
> On Wed, Mar 18, 2020 at 05:52:37AM -0700, Oliver Westermann wrote:
> > Hey,
> >
> > We're currently using a VM on Windows and it's a lot slower than the native
> > linux build (which is expected).
> > We're looking into getting a dedicated bui
On Wed, Mar 18, 2020 at 05:52:37AM -0700, Oliver Westermann wrote:
> Hey,
>
> We're currently using a VM on Windows and it's a lot slower than the native
> linux build (which is expected).
> We're looking into getting a dedicated build server for our team (basically a
> self-build tower PC). Any
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