* [gentoo-user] Tips/Tricks for Gentoo on low-spec computer? @ 2009-01-20 16:46 Grant Edwards 2009-01-20 17:05 ` Paul Hartman ` (5 more replies) 0 siblings, 6 replies; 31+ messages in thread From: Grant Edwards @ 2009-01-20 16:46 UTC (permalink / raw To: gentoo-user I'm in the process of installing Gentoo on a rather old machine. It's an old HP Pavilion with a 450MHz Celeron Mendocino and 256MB of PC133 SDRAM. I'm using an nVidia PCI FX6200 video board instead of the i810 on-board chip, and it's got a decent hard drive (160GB). I was wondering if there were any particular tips/tricks for getting the best performance out of such a machine. It's to be used for basic word processing and a few games. Hopefully the nVidia 6200 will allow OpenGL to run fast enough for something like TuxRacer. I chose XFCE for the desktop along with both Abiword and OpenOffice. I probably should have installed OOo from a binary package, but I decided to build it just to see how long it would take (so far it's at about 26 hours and counting). -- Grant Edwards grante Yow! I just remembered at something about a TOAD! visi.com ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 31+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-user] Tips/Tricks for Gentoo on low-spec computer? 2009-01-20 16:46 [gentoo-user] Tips/Tricks for Gentoo on low-spec computer? Grant Edwards @ 2009-01-20 17:05 ` Paul Hartman 2009-01-20 17:11 ` Nick Cunningham 2009-01-20 17:36 ` [gentoo-user] " Grant Edwards 2009-01-20 17:38 ` [gentoo-user] " Mark Knecht ` (4 subsequent siblings) 5 siblings, 2 replies; 31+ messages in thread From: Paul Hartman @ 2009-01-20 17:05 UTC (permalink / raw To: gentoo-user On Tue, Jan 20, 2009 at 10:46 AM, Grant Edwards <grante@visi.com> wrote: > I'm in the process of installing Gentoo on a rather old > machine. It's an old HP Pavilion with a 450MHz Celeron > Mendocino and 256MB of PC133 SDRAM. I'm using an nVidia PCI > FX6200 video board instead of the i810 on-board chip, and it's > got a decent hard drive (160GB). > > I was wondering if there were any particular tips/tricks for > getting the best performance out of such a machine. It's to be > used for basic word processing and a few games. Hopefully the > nVidia 6200 will allow OpenGL to run fast enough for something > like TuxRacer. > > I chose XFCE for the desktop along with both Abiword and > OpenOffice. I probably should have installed OOo from a binary > package, but I decided to build it just to see how long it > would take (so far it's at about 26 hours and counting). My biggest suggestion for a slow machine is: distcc ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 31+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-user] Tips/Tricks for Gentoo on low-spec computer? 2009-01-20 17:05 ` Paul Hartman @ 2009-01-20 17:11 ` Nick Cunningham 2009-01-20 17:36 ` [gentoo-user] " Grant Edwards 1 sibling, 0 replies; 31+ messages in thread From: Nick Cunningham @ 2009-01-20 17:11 UTC (permalink / raw To: gentoo-user [-- Attachment #1: Type: text/plain, Size: 1620 bytes --] 2009/1/20 Paul Hartman <paul.hartman+gentoo@gmail.com<paul.hartman%2Bgentoo@gmail.com> > > On Tue, Jan 20, 2009 at 10:46 AM, Grant Edwards <grante@visi.com> wrote: > > I'm in the process of installing Gentoo on a rather old > > machine. It's an old HP Pavilion with a 450MHz Celeron > > Mendocino and 256MB of PC133 SDRAM. I'm using an nVidia PCI > > FX6200 video board instead of the i810 on-board chip, and it's > > got a decent hard drive (160GB). > > > > I was wondering if there were any particular tips/tricks for > > getting the best performance out of such a machine. It's to be > > used for basic word processing and a few games. Hopefully the > > nVidia 6200 will allow OpenGL to run fast enough for something > > like TuxRacer. > > > > I chose XFCE for the desktop along with both Abiword and > > OpenOffice. I probably should have installed OOo from a binary > > package, but I decided to build it just to see how long it > > would take (so far it's at about 26 hours and counting). > > My biggest suggestion for a slow machine is: distcc > > For something that slow even distcc wont do that much good, there are a number or packages that dont like distcc, and things like configure scripts will still run on the slow pc. A better option would be to use a faster pc to create binary packages and then point the slower pc to the binary repo, that way to doesnt even have to try and compile anything (which imo is crazy, im surprised OO hasnt crashed and run out of memory during its compile!). Do some digging, theres guides on the gentoo forums and the wiki i think for setting up binpkg hosts. - Nick [-- Attachment #2: Type: text/html, Size: 2092 bytes --] ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 31+ messages in thread
* [gentoo-user] Re: Tips/Tricks for Gentoo on low-spec computer? 2009-01-20 17:05 ` Paul Hartman 2009-01-20 17:11 ` Nick Cunningham @ 2009-01-20 17:36 ` Grant Edwards 1 sibling, 0 replies; 31+ messages in thread From: Grant Edwards @ 2009-01-20 17:36 UTC (permalink / raw To: gentoo-user On 2009-01-20, Paul Hartman <paul.hartman+gentoo@gmail.com> wrote: > My biggest suggestion for a slow machine is: distcc I'm not too concerned about build times for large packages. The machine isn't going to be connect to a network and once it's in a "working" state won't be doing much emerging. Secondly, I've never had much luck with distcc. When I last tried it (admittedly a couple years ago), I immediately started tripping over packages that wouldn't build using distcc. -- Grant Edwards grante Yow! Are you still an at ALCOHOLIC? visi.com ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 31+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-user] Tips/Tricks for Gentoo on low-spec computer? 2009-01-20 16:46 [gentoo-user] Tips/Tricks for Gentoo on low-spec computer? Grant Edwards 2009-01-20 17:05 ` Paul Hartman @ 2009-01-20 17:38 ` Mark Knecht 2009-01-20 20:36 ` [gentoo-user] Anxiousness? [was:Tips/Tricks for Gentoo on low-spec computer?] b.n. 2009-01-20 18:01 ` [gentoo-user] Tips/Tricks for Gentoo on low-spec computer? Dirk Heinrichs ` (3 subsequent siblings) 5 siblings, 1 reply; 31+ messages in thread From: Mark Knecht @ 2009-01-20 17:38 UTC (permalink / raw To: gentoo-user On Tue, Jan 20, 2009 at 8:46 AM, Grant Edwards <grante@visi.com> wrote: > I'm in the process of installing Gentoo on a rather old > machine. It's an old HP Pavilion with a 450MHz Celeron > Mendocino and 256MB of PC133 SDRAM. I'm using an nVidia PCI > FX6200 video board instead of the i810 on-board chip, and it's > got a decent hard drive (160GB). > > I was wondering if there were any particular tips/tricks for > getting the best performance out of such a machine. It's to be > used for basic word processing and a few games. Hopefully the > nVidia 6200 will allow OpenGL to run fast enough for something > like TuxRacer. > > I chose XFCE for the desktop along with both Abiword and > OpenOffice. I probably should have installed OOo from a binary > package, but I decided to build it just to see how long it > would take (so far it's at about 26 hours and counting). > > -- > Grant Edwards grante Yow! I just remembered > at something about a TOAD! > visi.com Grant, We used to use a machine very similar to the one you discuss as a Gentoo desktop machine. I built Gnome and it worked fine. I personally like fluxbox which is a very light environment. Currently it's operating as my main mythbackend server with two PVR cards in it. Still going strong. The one thing I would respectfully suggest is that you carefully build your own portage overlay. My experience with Gentoo over the last few years is that there is a _anxiousness_ in the portage maintainer area to move newer revisions of software into portage quickly and then just as quickly to remove from portage what users are currently using. This forces folks to build more often and on a machine like you are talking about that can be fairly painful. There's no harm in masking higher revisions of software. The only issue I've run into is eix-test-obsolete telling me I have something installed that's no longer in portage. However with your own portage overlay I beleive you could get beyond this. I don't personally use the portage tools for building binary backups of packages - and probably I should. You might look at that also. Good luck, Mark ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 31+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-user] Anxiousness? [was:Tips/Tricks for Gentoo on low-spec computer?] 2009-01-20 17:38 ` [gentoo-user] " Mark Knecht @ 2009-01-20 20:36 ` b.n. 2009-01-20 20:47 ` Paul Hartman 2009-01-21 0:28 ` Peter Alfredsen 0 siblings, 2 replies; 31+ messages in thread From: b.n. @ 2009-01-20 20:36 UTC (permalink / raw To: gentoo-user Mark Knecht ha scritto: > The one thing I would respectfully suggest is that you carefully > build your own portage overlay. My experience with Gentoo over the > last few years is that there is a _anxiousness_ in the portage > maintainer area to move newer revisions of software into portage > quickly and then just as quickly to remove from portage what users are > currently using. Really? I am usually a bit annoyed by the contrary. On an almost 1-year old Kubuntu (8.04 Hardy Heron) I can find packages that are just barely x86 stable now on Gentoo. A couple of examples I am aware of: Firefox 3: stable just since one month on Gentoo x86, was included in KB8.04 Qtiplot: 0.9.x stable and working on KB8.04, all releases ~x86 (and a hell to compile on a stable system -still didn't manage to do it) in Gentoo. Python releases are often behind, and not mentioning KDE 4, which is even default on 8.10 Kubuntu and on Gentoo was still hardmasked last time I checked (but probably Gentoo is just right in this respect, everyone keeps telling me to wait before digging into KDE 4). I fully understand that there are good reasons for that, and that the meta-distribution status of Gentoo makes harder to check packages (and also that the Ubuntu folks wildly release unstable stuff... firefox 3 rc in 8.04, for example). I just feel that (stable) Gentoo is actually a bit *behind* the average Linux distribution in its revisions of software. Most importantly, I also feel that that's something new: when I first installed my system, more than 4 years ago, I felt it was *ahead*. I wonder if it's due just to the sheer increase of work required to test packages, or if there are decisions behind that (or if it's just me having false memories). m. ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 31+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-user] Anxiousness? [was:Tips/Tricks for Gentoo on low-spec computer?] 2009-01-20 20:36 ` [gentoo-user] Anxiousness? [was:Tips/Tricks for Gentoo on low-spec computer?] b.n. @ 2009-01-20 20:47 ` Paul Hartman 2009-01-20 21:16 ` Nick Cunningham 2009-01-21 0:28 ` Peter Alfredsen 1 sibling, 1 reply; 31+ messages in thread From: Paul Hartman @ 2009-01-20 20:47 UTC (permalink / raw To: gentoo-user On Tue, Jan 20, 2009 at 2:36 PM, b.n. <brullonulla@gmail.com> wrote: > Mark Knecht ha scritto: > >> The one thing I would respectfully suggest is that you carefully >> build your own portage overlay. My experience with Gentoo over the >> last few years is that there is a _anxiousness_ in the portage >> maintainer area to move newer revisions of software into portage >> quickly and then just as quickly to remove from portage what users are >> currently using. > > Really? > > I am usually a bit annoyed by the contrary. On an almost 1-year old > Kubuntu (8.04 Hardy Heron) I can find packages that are just barely x86 > stable now on Gentoo. > > A couple of examples I am aware of: > Firefox 3: stable just since one month on Gentoo x86, was included in KB8.04 > Qtiplot: 0.9.x stable and working on KB8.04, all releases ~x86 (and a > hell to compile on a stable system -still didn't manage to do it) in Gentoo. > > Python releases are often behind, and not mentioning KDE 4, which is > even default on 8.10 Kubuntu and on Gentoo was still hardmasked last > time I checked (but probably Gentoo is just right in this respect, > everyone keeps telling me to wait before digging into KDE 4). > > I fully understand that there are good reasons for that, and that the > meta-distribution status of Gentoo makes harder to check packages (and > also that the Ubuntu folks wildly release unstable stuff... firefox 3 rc > in 8.04, for example). I just feel that (stable) Gentoo is actually a > bit *behind* the average Linux distribution in its revisions of software. > > Most importantly, I also feel that that's something new: when I first > installed my system, more than 4 years ago, I felt it was *ahead*. I > wonder if it's due just to the sheer increase of work required to test > packages, or if there are decisions behind that (or if it's just me > having false memories). When I first installed Gentoo a few years ago, I think I switched from x86 to ~x86 in the first 24 hours, for the very reason. I wanted to use the newest versions and the "stable" stuff was so old... It seems the majority of users are using ~arch these days. ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 31+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-user] Anxiousness? [was:Tips/Tricks for Gentoo on low-spec computer?] 2009-01-20 20:47 ` Paul Hartman @ 2009-01-20 21:16 ` Nick Cunningham 2009-01-20 21:33 ` Saphirus Sage 0 siblings, 1 reply; 31+ messages in thread From: Nick Cunningham @ 2009-01-20 21:16 UTC (permalink / raw To: gentoo-user [-- Attachment #1: Type: text/plain, Size: 2795 bytes --] 2009/1/20 Paul Hartman <paul.hartman+gentoo@gmail.com<paul.hartman%2Bgentoo@gmail.com> > > On Tue, Jan 20, 2009 at 2:36 PM, b.n. <brullonulla@gmail.com> wrote: > > Mark Knecht ha scritto: > > > >> The one thing I would respectfully suggest is that you carefully > >> build your own portage overlay. My experience with Gentoo over the > >> last few years is that there is a _anxiousness_ in the portage > >> maintainer area to move newer revisions of software into portage > >> quickly and then just as quickly to remove from portage what users are > >> currently using. > > > > Really? > > > > I am usually a bit annoyed by the contrary. On an almost 1-year old > > Kubuntu (8.04 Hardy Heron) I can find packages that are just barely x86 > > stable now on Gentoo. > > > > A couple of examples I am aware of: > > Firefox 3: stable just since one month on Gentoo x86, was included in > KB8.04 > > Qtiplot: 0.9.x stable and working on KB8.04, all releases ~x86 (and a > > hell to compile on a stable system -still didn't manage to do it) in > Gentoo. > > > > Python releases are often behind, and not mentioning KDE 4, which is > > even default on 8.10 Kubuntu and on Gentoo was still hardmasked last > > time I checked (but probably Gentoo is just right in this respect, > > everyone keeps telling me to wait before digging into KDE 4). > > > > I fully understand that there are good reasons for that, and that the > > meta-distribution status of Gentoo makes harder to check packages (and > > also that the Ubuntu folks wildly release unstable stuff... firefox 3 rc > > in 8.04, for example). I just feel that (stable) Gentoo is actually a > > bit *behind* the average Linux distribution in its revisions of software. > > > > Most importantly, I also feel that that's something new: when I first > > installed my system, more than 4 years ago, I felt it was *ahead*. I > > wonder if it's due just to the sheer increase of work required to test > > packages, or if there are decisions behind that (or if it's just me > > having false memories). > > When I first installed Gentoo a few years ago, I think I switched from > x86 to ~x86 in the first 24 hours, for the very reason. I wanted to > use the newest versions and the "stable" stuff was so old... It seems > the majority of users are using ~arch these days. > > I see it as a good thing, a sign that Gentoo is maturing beyond just being a 'ricing' distro. Its now possible to have the best of both worlds, whether you want the stability of well tested packages from ARCH, or the chance to get newer packages, but with a chance of bugs and potential breakage by using ~ARCH. Im a happy ~ARCH user myself, and have been for a long time, however i do stick to using plain ARCH on my little server just to keep it stable and happy. - Nick [-- Attachment #2: Type: text/html, Size: 3443 bytes --] ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 31+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-user] Anxiousness? [was:Tips/Tricks for Gentoo on low-spec computer?] 2009-01-20 21:16 ` Nick Cunningham @ 2009-01-20 21:33 ` Saphirus Sage 0 siblings, 0 replies; 31+ messages in thread From: Saphirus Sage @ 2009-01-20 21:33 UTC (permalink / raw To: gentoo-user@lists.gentoo.org [-- Attachment #1: Type: text/plain, Size: 3391 bytes --] I'm a total ~ARCH user, just because part of me really loves the joys of debugging. Honestly, on the rare occasion that something doesn't work, I've found a lesson is best learned when it is necessary. So in short, a bug is just a chance to learn to do something slightly differently. Anyway, for a low-spec system, installing from binaries when possible would probably be a good idea. Other than that, just be specific in what you want with your USE flags. On Jan 20, 2009, at 4:16 PM, Nick Cunningham <nick@monkeydust.net> wrote: > > > 2009/1/20 Paul Hartman <paul.hartman+gentoo@gmail.com> > On Tue, Jan 20, 2009 at 2:36 PM, b.n. <brullonulla@gmail.com> wrote: > > Mark Knecht ha scritto: > > > >> The one thing I would respectfully suggest is that you carefully > >> build your own portage overlay. My experience with Gentoo over the > >> last few years is that there is a _anxiousness_ in the portage > >> maintainer area to move newer revisions of software into portage > >> quickly and then just as quickly to remove from portage what > users are > >> currently using. > > > > Really? > > > > I am usually a bit annoyed by the contrary. On an almost 1-year old > > Kubuntu (8.04 Hardy Heron) I can find packages that are just > barely x86 > > stable now on Gentoo. > > > > A couple of examples I am aware of: > > Firefox 3: stable just since one month on Gentoo x86, was included > in KB8.04 > > Qtiplot: 0.9.x stable and working on KB8.04, all releases ~x86 > (and a > > hell to compile on a stable system -still didn't manage to do it) > in Gentoo. > > > > Python releases are often behind, and not mentioning KDE 4, which is > > even default on 8.10 Kubuntu and on Gentoo was still hardmasked last > > time I checked (but probably Gentoo is just right in this respect, > > everyone keeps telling me to wait before digging into KDE 4). > > > > I fully understand that there are good reasons for that, and that > the > > meta-distribution status of Gentoo makes harder to check packages > (and > > also that the Ubuntu folks wildly release unstable stuff... > firefox 3 rc > > in 8.04, for example). I just feel that (stable) Gentoo is > actually a > > bit *behind* the average Linux distribution in its revisions of > software. > > > > Most importantly, I also feel that that's something new: when I > first > > installed my system, more than 4 years ago, I felt it was *ahead*. I > > wonder if it's due just to the sheer increase of work required to > test > > packages, or if there are decisions behind that (or if it's just me > > having false memories). > > When I first installed Gentoo a few years ago, I think I switched from > x86 to ~x86 in the first 24 hours, for the very reason. I wanted to > use the newest versions and the "stable" stuff was so old... It seems > the majority of users are using ~arch these days. > > > I see it as a good thing, a sign that Gentoo is maturing beyond just > being a 'ricing' distro. Its now possible to have the best of both > worlds, whether you want the stability of well tested packages from > ARCH, or the chance to get newer packages, but with a chance of bugs > and potential breakage by using ~ARCH. > > Im a happy ~ARCH user myself, and have been for a long time, however > i do stick to using plain ARCH on my little server just to keep it > stable and happy. > > - Nick [-- Attachment #2: Type: text/html, Size: 4112 bytes --] ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 31+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-user] Anxiousness? [was:Tips/Tricks for Gentoo on low-spec computer?] 2009-01-20 20:36 ` [gentoo-user] Anxiousness? [was:Tips/Tricks for Gentoo on low-spec computer?] b.n. 2009-01-20 20:47 ` Paul Hartman @ 2009-01-21 0:28 ` Peter Alfredsen 1 sibling, 0 replies; 31+ messages in thread From: Peter Alfredsen @ 2009-01-21 0:28 UTC (permalink / raw To: gentoo-user On Tue, 20 Jan 2009 21:36:58 +0100 "b.n." <brullonulla@gmail.com> wrote: > Mark Knecht ha scritto: > > > The one thing I would respectfully suggest is that you carefully > > build your own portage overlay. My experience with Gentoo over the > > last few years is that there is a _anxiousness_ in the portage > > maintainer area to move newer revisions of software into portage > > quickly and then just as quickly to remove from portage what users > > are currently using. @Mark That's certainly true in the sense that we loathe maintaining several revisions of the same software. Each Gentoo maintainer can maintain anywhere from 1 to $BIG_NUM packages, so we strive to have in general at most three versions in portage at any given time. We don't really want bug reports about $old_stable if it's been fixed in a $new_stable. We're not backport-monkeys, like Ubuntu. We do what we do cause we like solving complex problems, interacting with the smart people we call 'users'[1] and our fellow devs, not because "svn diff" is our BFF. :-) > I am usually a bit annoyed by the contrary. On an almost 1-year old > Kubuntu (8.04 Hardy Heron) I can find packages that are just barely > x86 stable now on Gentoo. > > A couple of examples I am aware of: > Firefox 3: stable just since one month on Gentoo x86, was included in > KB8.04 Qtiplot: 0.9.x stable and working on KB8.04, all releases ~x86 > (and a hell to compile on a stable system -still didn't manage to do > it) in Gentoo. I don't know about qtiplot but Firefox-3 was blocked by the fact that there were stability problems the first many months, compared to firefox-2. I remember random crashes, etc. Then we had a mysterious bug where it would segfault on first start if compiled with USE="xulrunner", i.e. using the system libxul, but not if we used the bundled one. Then we had some problems with hardened Gentoo, Sparc getting bus errors, etc. If you remember firefox-2 when first it came out, it also had the same kinds of problems. I think it wasn't before 2.0.0.11 that I migrated from 1.5. Gentoo has many arches and the more popular a package is, the more bugreports will come, the harder it will be to mark it stable. Firefox is especially hard to maintain because users use it so very much. > Python releases are often behind, and not mentioning KDE 4, which is > even default on 8.10 Kubuntu and on Gentoo was still hardmasked last > time I checked (but probably Gentoo is just right in this respect, > everyone keeps telling me to wait before digging into KDE 4). Python is a special case. Portage (emerge and friends) use it, so we always try to have as few bugs as possible in the versions that are put into the tree. Kde 4.1 is broken, compared to 3.5.9/10. I tried it and I don't want it. The problem we have now is that 3.5.10 is starting to bitrot, so we'll probably *have* to mark 4.2 stable. > I fully understand that there are good reasons for that, and that the > meta-distribution status of Gentoo makes harder to check packages (and > also that the Ubuntu folks wildly release unstable stuff... firefox 3 > rc in 8.04, for example). I just feel that (stable) Gentoo is > actually a bit *behind* the average Linux distribution in its > revisions of software. You asked for stable, you got it. We're usually faster than Debian stable though. > Most importantly, I also feel that that's something new: when I first > installed my system, more than 4 years ago, I felt it was *ahead*. I did too, but then I was coming from Windows, so that's hardly surprising :-) No, seriously it didn't take long for me to go ~x86. I think it was ati-drivers (oh noez!) and keeping them in sync with xorg-server that drove me to it. > I wonder if it's due just to the sheer increase of work required to > test packages, or if there are decisions behind that (or if it's just > me having false memories). The amount of work has something to do with it, you (users) can help there by filing stable requests if you see a package that you feel has been ~arch for too long. We do react to nudges. Most of us, anyway. /PA [1] It wouldn't really be much fun being a dev for Gentoo if we didn't have the bestest users evers. Srsly :-). If you look at how many bug reports there are and how many are at least partially solved by users before a dev gets to it, it's quite humbling. Sometimes I can spend hours being a commit-monkey for users who've posted bugreports that makes solving the bug a matter of fifteen minutes, tops. ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 31+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-user] Tips/Tricks for Gentoo on low-spec computer? 2009-01-20 16:46 [gentoo-user] Tips/Tricks for Gentoo on low-spec computer? Grant Edwards 2009-01-20 17:05 ` Paul Hartman 2009-01-20 17:38 ` [gentoo-user] " Mark Knecht @ 2009-01-20 18:01 ` Dirk Heinrichs 2009-01-20 19:30 ` [gentoo-user] " Grant Edwards 2009-01-20 18:09 ` [gentoo-user] " kashani ` (2 subsequent siblings) 5 siblings, 1 reply; 31+ messages in thread From: Dirk Heinrichs @ 2009-01-20 18:01 UTC (permalink / raw To: gentoo-user [-- Attachment #1: Type: text/plain, Size: 1683 bytes --] Am Dienstag, 20. Januar 2009 17:46:06 schrieb Grant Edwards: > I'm in the process of installing Gentoo on a rather old > machine. It's an old HP Pavilion with a 450MHz Celeron > Mendocino and 256MB of PC133 SDRAM. I'm using an nVidia PCI > FX6200 video board instead of the i810 on-board chip, and it's > got a decent hard drive (160GB). > > I was wondering if there were any particular tips/tricks for > getting the best performance out of such a machine. It's to be > used for basic word processing and a few games. Hopefully the > nVidia 6200 will allow OpenGL to run fast enough for something > like TuxRacer. Don't know if this is possible with portage, I switched to paludis a long time ago. However, with paludis, one can setup several environments, each with a different set of USE flags, CFLAGS, etc., where each will be installed into a different root directory. Inside this root directory, everything looks like a normal install. So you could mount the complete filesystem tree of the slow machine on a faster one (via NFS), compile everything on the fast machine and let it install to /root_of_slow_box. > I chose XFCE for the desktop along with both Abiword and > OpenOffice. I probably should have installed OOo from a binary > package, but I decided to build it just to see how long it > would take (so far it's at about 26 hours and counting). Hehe, I once did a "Linux from Scratch" install on my Amiga. Compiling GCC took ages to complete, didn't even dare to think about something like OOo. I always use FVWM on low power machines. It's quite fast and, with the crystal theme, looks very nice. HTH... Dirk [-- Attachment #2: This is a digitally signed message part. --] [-- Type: application/pgp-signature, Size: 189 bytes --] ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 31+ messages in thread
* [gentoo-user] Re: Tips/Tricks for Gentoo on low-spec computer? 2009-01-20 18:01 ` [gentoo-user] Tips/Tricks for Gentoo on low-spec computer? Dirk Heinrichs @ 2009-01-20 19:30 ` Grant Edwards 0 siblings, 0 replies; 31+ messages in thread From: Grant Edwards @ 2009-01-20 19:30 UTC (permalink / raw To: gentoo-user On 2009-01-20, Dirk Heinrichs <dirk.heinrichs@online.de> wrote: > Don't know if this is possible with portage, I switched to > paludis a long time ago. However, with paludis, one can setup > several environments, each with a different set of USE flags, > CFLAGS, etc., where each will be installed into a different > root directory. Inside this root directory, everything looks > like a normal install. > > So you could mount the complete filesystem tree of the slow > machine on a faster one (via NFS), compile everything on the > fast machine and let it install to /root_of_slow_box. Thanks, that's an interesting option. Next time I go through this exercise I'll give it a try. >> I chose XFCE for the desktop along with both Abiword and >> OpenOffice. I probably should have installed OOo from a binary >> package, but I decided to build it just to see how long it >> would take (so far it's at about 26 hours and counting). > > Hehe, I once did a "Linux from Scratch" install on my Amiga. > Compiling GCC took ages to complete, didn't even dare to think > about something like OOo. > > I always use FVWM on low power machines. It's quite fast and, > with the crystal theme, looks very nice. I used fvwm (and fvwm2) for many years (starting with a 25MHz 80486 with 8MB of RAM) before switching to XFCE 5-6 years ago. About 10 years ago I configured a couple manufacturing test stations with fvwm95 so that they would be comfortable for people who normally used MS Windows. I think a couple of the users never even realized it was Linux. There was something in particular that prompted my change from fvwm2 to XFCE, but I can't remember what it was... -- Grant Edwards grante Yow! RHAPSODY in Glue! at visi.com ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 31+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-user] Tips/Tricks for Gentoo on low-spec computer? 2009-01-20 16:46 [gentoo-user] Tips/Tricks for Gentoo on low-spec computer? Grant Edwards ` (2 preceding siblings ...) 2009-01-20 18:01 ` [gentoo-user] Tips/Tricks for Gentoo on low-spec computer? Dirk Heinrichs @ 2009-01-20 18:09 ` kashani 2009-01-21 0:50 ` Dale 2009-01-24 14:40 ` Steven Lembark 5 siblings, 0 replies; 31+ messages in thread From: kashani @ 2009-01-20 18:09 UTC (permalink / raw To: gentoo-user Grant Edwards wrote: > I'm in the process of installing Gentoo on a rather old > machine. It's an old HP Pavilion with a 450MHz Celeron > Mendocino and 256MB of PC133 SDRAM. I'm using an nVidia PCI > FX6200 video board instead of the i810 on-board chip, and it's > got a decent hard drive (160GB). > > I was wondering if there were any particular tips/tricks for > getting the best performance out of such a machine. It's to be > used for basic word processing and a few games. Hopefully the > nVidia 6200 will allow OpenGL to run fast enough for something > like TuxRacer. > > I chose XFCE for the desktop along with both Abiword and > OpenOffice. I probably should have installed OOo from a binary > package, but I decided to build it just to see how long it > would take (so far it's at about 26 hours and counting). > I usually just pull the drive and put it in a faster computer. Build the OS with conservative CFLAGs and swap the drive back when done. I've rarely had issues with this. kashani ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 31+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-user] Tips/Tricks for Gentoo on low-spec computer? 2009-01-20 16:46 [gentoo-user] Tips/Tricks for Gentoo on low-spec computer? Grant Edwards ` (3 preceding siblings ...) 2009-01-20 18:09 ` [gentoo-user] " kashani @ 2009-01-21 0:50 ` Dale 2009-01-24 14:40 ` Steven Lembark 5 siblings, 0 replies; 31+ messages in thread From: Dale @ 2009-01-21 0:50 UTC (permalink / raw To: gentoo-user Grant Edwards wrote: > I'm in the process of installing Gentoo on a rather old > machine. It's an old HP Pavilion with a 450MHz Celeron > Mendocino and 256MB of PC133 SDRAM. I'm using an nVidia PCI > FX6200 video board instead of the i810 on-board chip, and it's > got a decent hard drive (160GB). > > I was wondering if there were any particular tips/tricks for > getting the best performance out of such a machine. It's to be > used for basic word processing and a few games. Hopefully the > nVidia 6200 will allow OpenGL to run fast enough for something > like TuxRacer. > > I chose XFCE for the desktop along with both Abiword and > OpenOffice. I probably should have installed OOo from a binary > package, but I decided to build it just to see how long it > would take (so far it's at about 26 hours and counting). > > I used to have several older puters here and what I always did was put the hard drive in my main machine, chroot in and do my installs. It has worked for me so far. I have also done my upgrades that way too. Note, this may not work if you are using a 64 bit and putting the drive in a 32 bit system. That part I have never done. Dale :-) :-) ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 31+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-user] Tips/Tricks for Gentoo on low-spec computer? 2009-01-20 16:46 [gentoo-user] Tips/Tricks for Gentoo on low-spec computer? Grant Edwards ` (4 preceding siblings ...) 2009-01-21 0:50 ` Dale @ 2009-01-24 14:40 ` Steven Lembark 5 siblings, 0 replies; 31+ messages in thread From: Steven Lembark @ 2009-01-24 14:40 UTC (permalink / raw To: gentoo-user > I'm in the process of installing Gentoo on a rather old > machine. It's an old HP Pavilion with a 450MHz Celeron > Mendocino and 256MB of PC133 SDRAM. I'm using an nVidia PCI > FX6200 video board instead of the i810 on-board chip, and it's > got a decent hard drive (160GB). > > I was wondering if there were any particular tips/tricks for > getting the best performance out of such a machine. It's to be > used for basic word processing and a few games. Hopefully the > nVidia 6200 will allow OpenGL to run fast enough for something > like TuxRacer. > > I chose XFCE for the desktop along with both Abiword and > OpenOffice. I probably should have installed OOo from a binary > package, but I decided to build it just to see how long it > would take (so far it's at about 26 hours and counting). Fvwm is lightweight. Make a point of compiling the kernel without anything you don't need; if you might need something then make it a module. Don't run daemon's you don't really need. For example, log into the command line and use "startx" or "xinit" rather than having the thing boot into an X11 login. Use a large amount of swap compared to ram (with your drive maybe 2G) and avoid tmpfs for working storage. If all you're using the thing for is surfing or basic development then it should work fine. The old standard for using X11 was a minimum 12MB of core and 40MB disk. For a long time that was difficult, then IDE came along and big disks got cheaper :-) -- Steven Lembark 85-09 90th St. Workhorse Computing Woodhaven, NY, 11421 lembark@wrkhors.com +1 888 359 3508 ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 31+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-user] Tips/Tricks for Gentoo on low-spec computer?
@ 2009-01-20 17:05 Volker Armin Hemmann
2009-01-20 17:14 ` Paul Hartman
` (2 more replies)
0 siblings, 3 replies; 31+ messages in thread
From: Volker Armin Hemmann @ 2009-01-20 17:05 UTC (permalink / raw
To: gentoo-user
On Dienstag 20 Januar 2009, Grant Edwards wrote:
> I'm in the process of installing Gentoo on a rather old
> machine. It's an old HP Pavilion with a 450MHz Celeron
> Mendocino and 256MB of PC133 SDRAM. I'm using an nVidia PCI
> FX6200 video board instead of the i810 on-board chip, and it's
> got a decent hard drive (160GB).
>
> I was wondering if there were any particular tips/tricks for
> getting the best performance out of such a machine. It's to be
> used for basic word processing and a few games. Hopefully the
> nVidia 6200 will allow OpenGL to run fast enough for something
> like TuxRacer.
>
> I chose XFCE for the desktop along with both Abiword and
> OpenOffice. I probably should have installed OOo from a binary
> package, but I decided to build it just to see how long it
> would take (so far it's at about 26 hours and counting).
if you don't need any special features, kde+koffice needs less ram than
xfce+openoffice.
And installing ooo from source is unsupport. The build breaks all the time and
you don't get anything from it. All it does is starting a second faster. It
does not need less ram nor does it run faster.
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 31+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-user] Tips/Tricks for Gentoo on low-spec computer? 2009-01-20 17:05 Volker Armin Hemmann @ 2009-01-20 17:14 ` Paul Hartman 2009-01-20 17:15 ` Alejandro 2009-01-21 0:54 ` Dale 2 siblings, 0 replies; 31+ messages in thread From: Paul Hartman @ 2009-01-20 17:14 UTC (permalink / raw To: gentoo-user On Tue, Jan 20, 2009 at 11:05 AM, Volker Armin Hemmann <volkerarmin@googlemail.com> wrote: > On Dienstag 20 Januar 2009, Grant Edwards wrote: >> I'm in the process of installing Gentoo on a rather old >> machine. It's an old HP Pavilion with a 450MHz Celeron >> Mendocino and 256MB of PC133 SDRAM. I'm using an nVidia PCI >> FX6200 video board instead of the i810 on-board chip, and it's >> got a decent hard drive (160GB). >> >> I was wondering if there were any particular tips/tricks for >> getting the best performance out of such a machine. It's to be >> used for basic word processing and a few games. Hopefully the >> nVidia 6200 will allow OpenGL to run fast enough for something >> like TuxRacer. >> >> I chose XFCE for the desktop along with both Abiword and >> OpenOffice. I probably should have installed OOo from a binary >> package, but I decided to build it just to see how long it >> would take (so far it's at about 26 hours and counting). > > if you don't need any special features, kde+koffice needs less ram than > xfce+openoffice. > > And installing ooo from source is unsupport. The build breaks all the time and > you don't get anything from it. All it does is starting a second faster. It > does not need less ram nor does it run faster. OOo from source uses the Go-Oo.org patch set, the binary does not (AFAIK) but, yes, watching compile die after an hour (or 20) is no fun :P ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 31+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-user] Tips/Tricks for Gentoo on low-spec computer? 2009-01-20 17:05 Volker Armin Hemmann 2009-01-20 17:14 ` Paul Hartman @ 2009-01-20 17:15 ` Alejandro 2009-01-20 17:22 ` Nick Cunningham 2009-01-20 17:27 ` Volker Armin Hemmann 2009-01-21 0:54 ` Dale 2 siblings, 2 replies; 31+ messages in thread From: Alejandro @ 2009-01-20 17:15 UTC (permalink / raw To: gentoo-user [-- Attachment #1: Type: text/plain, Size: 1394 bytes --] 2009/1/20 Volker Armin Hemmann <volkerarmin@googlemail.com> > On Dienstag 20 Januar 2009, Grant Edwards wrote: > > I'm in the process of installing Gentoo on a rather old > > machine. It's an old HP Pavilion with a 450MHz Celeron > > Mendocino and 256MB of PC133 SDRAM. I'm using an nVidia PCI > > FX6200 video board instead of the i810 on-board chip, and it's > > got a decent hard drive (160GB). > > > > I was wondering if there were any particular tips/tricks for > > getting the best performance out of such a machine. It's to be > > used for basic word processing and a few games. Hopefully the > > nVidia 6200 will allow OpenGL to run fast enough for something > > like TuxRacer. > > > > I chose XFCE for the desktop along with both Abiword and > > OpenOffice. I probably should have installed OOo from a binary > > package, but I decided to build it just to see how long it > > would take (so far it's at about 26 hours and counting). > > if you don't need any special features, kde+koffice needs less ram than > xfce+openoffice. > > And installing ooo from source is unsupport. The build breaks all the time > and > you don't get anything from it. All it does is starting a second faster. It > does not need less ram nor does it run faster. > > > "installing ooo from source is unsupport" How is this? Maybe you missundertand i think he run emerge openoffice and not openoffice-bin [-- Attachment #2: Type: text/html, Size: 1846 bytes --] ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 31+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-user] Tips/Tricks for Gentoo on low-spec computer? 2009-01-20 17:15 ` Alejandro @ 2009-01-20 17:22 ` Nick Cunningham 2009-01-20 17:32 ` Paul Hartman 2009-01-24 14:43 ` Steven Lembark 2009-01-20 17:27 ` Volker Armin Hemmann 1 sibling, 2 replies; 31+ messages in thread From: Nick Cunningham @ 2009-01-20 17:22 UTC (permalink / raw To: gentoo-user [-- Attachment #1: Type: text/plain, Size: 1752 bytes --] 2009/1/20 Alejandro <elcorreodeale@gmail.com> > > > 2009/1/20 Volker Armin Hemmann <volkerarmin@googlemail.com> > >> On Dienstag 20 Januar 2009, Grant Edwards wrote: >> > I'm in the process of installing Gentoo on a rather old >> > machine. It's an old HP Pavilion with a 450MHz Celeron >> > Mendocino and 256MB of PC133 SDRAM. I'm using an nVidia PCI >> > FX6200 video board instead of the i810 on-board chip, and it's >> > got a decent hard drive (160GB). >> > >> > I was wondering if there were any particular tips/tricks for >> > getting the best performance out of such a machine. It's to be >> > used for basic word processing and a few games. Hopefully the >> > nVidia 6200 will allow OpenGL to run fast enough for something >> > like TuxRacer. >> > >> > I chose XFCE for the desktop along with both Abiword and >> > OpenOffice. I probably should have installed OOo from a binary >> > package, but I decided to build it just to see how long it >> > would take (so far it's at about 26 hours and counting). >> >> if you don't need any special features, kde+koffice needs less ram than >> xfce+openoffice. >> >> And installing ooo from source is unsupport. The build breaks all the time >> and >> you don't get anything from it. All it does is starting a second faster. >> It >> does not need less ram nor does it run faster. >> >> >> > "installing ooo from source is unsupport" How is this? Maybe you > missundertand i think he run emerge openoffice and not openoffice-bin > I believe he means that generally speaking, trying to build OO from source on a low-end (and especially low RAM) machine is ill-advised and can often be the cause of build failures as OO is well known to require a lot of RAM and hdd space while it compiles. - Nick [-- Attachment #2: Type: text/html, Size: 2492 bytes --] ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 31+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-user] Tips/Tricks for Gentoo on low-spec computer? 2009-01-20 17:22 ` Nick Cunningham @ 2009-01-20 17:32 ` Paul Hartman 2009-01-20 18:42 ` Neil Bothwick 2009-01-24 14:43 ` Steven Lembark 1 sibling, 1 reply; 31+ messages in thread From: Paul Hartman @ 2009-01-20 17:32 UTC (permalink / raw To: gentoo-user On Tue, Jan 20, 2009 at 11:22 AM, Nick Cunningham <nick@monkeydust.net> wrote: > > > 2009/1/20 Alejandro <elcorreodeale@gmail.com> >> >> >> 2009/1/20 Volker Armin Hemmann <volkerarmin@googlemail.com> >>> >>> On Dienstag 20 Januar 2009, Grant Edwards wrote: >>> > I'm in the process of installing Gentoo on a rather old >>> > machine. It's an old HP Pavilion with a 450MHz Celeron >>> > Mendocino and 256MB of PC133 SDRAM. I'm using an nVidia PCI >>> > FX6200 video board instead of the i810 on-board chip, and it's >>> > got a decent hard drive (160GB). >>> > >>> > I was wondering if there were any particular tips/tricks for >>> > getting the best performance out of such a machine. It's to be >>> > used for basic word processing and a few games. Hopefully the >>> > nVidia 6200 will allow OpenGL to run fast enough for something >>> > like TuxRacer. >>> > >>> > I chose XFCE for the desktop along with both Abiword and >>> > OpenOffice. I probably should have installed OOo from a binary >>> > package, but I decided to build it just to see how long it >>> > would take (so far it's at about 26 hours and counting). >>> >>> if you don't need any special features, kde+koffice needs less ram than >>> xfce+openoffice. >>> >>> And installing ooo from source is unsupport. The build breaks all the >>> time and >>> you don't get anything from it. All it does is starting a second faster. >>> It >>> does not need less ram nor does it run faster. >>> >>> >> >> "installing ooo from source is unsupport" How is this? Maybe you >> missundertand i think he run emerge openoffice and not openoffice-bin > > I believe he means that generally speaking, trying to build OO from source > on a low-end (and especially low RAM) machine is ill-advised and can often > be the cause of build failures as OO is well known to require a lot of RAM > and hdd space while it compiles. > > - Nick > I know it needs 5gb+ of tmpdir space, but compiling it with 256mb may be futile :) ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 31+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-user] Tips/Tricks for Gentoo on low-spec computer? 2009-01-20 17:32 ` Paul Hartman @ 2009-01-20 18:42 ` Neil Bothwick 2009-01-20 18:53 ` Dirk Heinrichs 0 siblings, 1 reply; 31+ messages in thread From: Neil Bothwick @ 2009-01-20 18:42 UTC (permalink / raw To: gentoo-user [-- Attachment #1: Type: text/plain, Size: 361 bytes --] On Tue, 20 Jan 2009 11:32:02 -0600, Paul Hartman wrote: > I know it needs 5gb+ of tmpdir space, but compiling it with 256mb may > be futile :) Not if he's got plenty of swap, it'll just run even slower. Expect a new Debian release before OOo finishes building :) -- Neil Bothwick Dream as if you'll live forever. Live as if you'll die today. [-- Attachment #2: signature.asc --] [-- Type: application/pgp-signature, Size: 197 bytes --] ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 31+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-user] Tips/Tricks for Gentoo on low-spec computer? 2009-01-20 18:42 ` Neil Bothwick @ 2009-01-20 18:53 ` Dirk Heinrichs 0 siblings, 0 replies; 31+ messages in thread From: Dirk Heinrichs @ 2009-01-20 18:53 UTC (permalink / raw To: gentoo-user [-- Attachment #1: Type: text/plain, Size: 254 bytes --] Am Dienstag, 20. Januar 2009 19:42:47 schrieb Neil Bothwick: > Not if he's got plenty of swap, it'll just run even slower. Expect a new > Debian release before OOo finishes building :) LOL, can't imagine that it compiles _that_ slow ;-) Bye... Dirk [-- Attachment #2: This is a digitally signed message part. --] [-- Type: application/pgp-signature, Size: 189 bytes --] ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 31+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-user] Tips/Tricks for Gentoo on low-spec computer? 2009-01-20 17:22 ` Nick Cunningham 2009-01-20 17:32 ` Paul Hartman @ 2009-01-24 14:43 ` Steven Lembark 1 sibling, 0 replies; 31+ messages in thread From: Steven Lembark @ 2009-01-24 14:43 UTC (permalink / raw To: gentoo-user > I believe he means that generally speaking, trying to build OO from > source on a low-end (and especially low RAM) machine is ill-advised and > can often be the cause of build failures as OO is well known to require > a lot of RAM and hdd space while it compiles. He has plenty of disk. It may use a lot of virtual memory, but with sufficient swap it will [eventually] get done. -- Steven Lembark 85-09 90th St. Workhorse Computing Woodhaven, NY, 11421 lembark@wrkhors.com +1 888 359 3508 ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 31+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-user] Tips/Tricks for Gentoo on low-spec computer? 2009-01-20 17:15 ` Alejandro 2009-01-20 17:22 ` Nick Cunningham @ 2009-01-20 17:27 ` Volker Armin Hemmann 2009-01-20 17:37 ` Paul Hartman 1 sibling, 1 reply; 31+ messages in thread From: Volker Armin Hemmann @ 2009-01-20 17:27 UTC (permalink / raw To: gentoo-user On Dienstag 20 Januar 2009, Alejandro wrote: > 2009/1/20 Volker Armin Hemmann <volkerarmin@googlemail.com> > > > On Dienstag 20 Januar 2009, Grant Edwards wrote: > > > I'm in the process of installing Gentoo on a rather old > > > machine. It's an old HP Pavilion with a 450MHz Celeron > > > Mendocino and 256MB of PC133 SDRAM. I'm using an nVidia PCI > > > FX6200 video board instead of the i810 on-board chip, and it's > > > got a decent hard drive (160GB). > > > > > > I was wondering if there were any particular tips/tricks for > > > getting the best performance out of such a machine. It's to be > > > used for basic word processing and a few games. Hopefully the > > > nVidia 6200 will allow OpenGL to run fast enough for something > > > like TuxRacer. > > > > > > I chose XFCE for the desktop along with both Abiword and > > > OpenOffice. I probably should have installed OOo from a binary > > > package, but I decided to build it just to see how long it > > > would take (so far it's at about 26 hours and counting). > > > > if you don't need any special features, kde+koffice needs less ram than > > xfce+openoffice. > > > > And installing ooo from source is unsupport. The build breaks all the > > time and > > you don't get anything from it. All it does is starting a second faster. > > It does not need less ram nor does it run faster. > > "installing ooo from source is unsupport" How is this? Maybe you > missundertand i think he run emerge openoffice and not openoffice-bin http://marc.info/?l=linux-kernel&m=123104511608102&w=2 ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 31+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-user] Tips/Tricks for Gentoo on low-spec computer? 2009-01-20 17:27 ` Volker Armin Hemmann @ 2009-01-20 17:37 ` Paul Hartman 2009-01-20 17:56 ` Volker Armin Hemmann 0 siblings, 1 reply; 31+ messages in thread From: Paul Hartman @ 2009-01-20 17:37 UTC (permalink / raw To: gentoo-user On Tue, Jan 20, 2009 at 11:27 AM, Volker Armin Hemmann <volkerarmin@googlemail.com> wrote: > On Dienstag 20 Januar 2009, Alejandro wrote: >> 2009/1/20 Volker Armin Hemmann <volkerarmin@googlemail.com> >> >> > On Dienstag 20 Januar 2009, Grant Edwards wrote: >> > > I'm in the process of installing Gentoo on a rather old >> > > machine. It's an old HP Pavilion with a 450MHz Celeron >> > > Mendocino and 256MB of PC133 SDRAM. I'm using an nVidia PCI >> > > FX6200 video board instead of the i810 on-board chip, and it's >> > > got a decent hard drive (160GB). >> > > >> > > I was wondering if there were any particular tips/tricks for >> > > getting the best performance out of such a machine. It's to be >> > > used for basic word processing and a few games. Hopefully the >> > > nVidia 6200 will allow OpenGL to run fast enough for something >> > > like TuxRacer. >> > > >> > > I chose XFCE for the desktop along with both Abiword and >> > > OpenOffice. I probably should have installed OOo from a binary >> > > package, but I decided to build it just to see how long it >> > > would take (so far it's at about 26 hours and counting). >> > >> > if you don't need any special features, kde+koffice needs less ram than >> > xfce+openoffice. >> > >> > And installing ooo from source is unsupport. The build breaks all the >> > time and >> > you don't get anything from it. All it does is starting a second faster. >> > It does not need less ram nor does it run faster. >> >> "installing ooo from source is unsupport" How is this? Maybe you >> missundertand i think he run emerge openoffice and not openoffice-bin > > http://marc.info/?l=linux-kernel&m=123104511608102&w=2 > > > > I think that (old) mask quoted in that person's message is because OpenOffice before 2.0.4 did not support 64-bit compiling at all. ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 31+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-user] Tips/Tricks for Gentoo on low-spec computer? 2009-01-20 17:37 ` Paul Hartman @ 2009-01-20 17:56 ` Volker Armin Hemmann 2009-01-20 18:00 ` s3b4sm4gr1 0 siblings, 1 reply; 31+ messages in thread From: Volker Armin Hemmann @ 2009-01-20 17:56 UTC (permalink / raw To: gentoo-user On Dienstag 20 Januar 2009, Paul Hartman wrote: > On Tue, Jan 20, 2009 at 11:27 AM, Volker Armin Hemmann > > <volkerarmin@googlemail.com> wrote: > > On Dienstag 20 Januar 2009, Alejandro wrote: > >> 2009/1/20 Volker Armin Hemmann <volkerarmin@googlemail.com> > >> > >> > On Dienstag 20 Januar 2009, Grant Edwards wrote: > >> > > I'm in the process of installing Gentoo on a rather old > >> > > machine. It's an old HP Pavilion with a 450MHz Celeron > >> > > Mendocino and 256MB of PC133 SDRAM. I'm using an nVidia PCI > >> > > FX6200 video board instead of the i810 on-board chip, and it's > >> > > got a decent hard drive (160GB). > >> > > > >> > > I was wondering if there were any particular tips/tricks for > >> > > getting the best performance out of such a machine. It's to be > >> > > used for basic word processing and a few games. Hopefully the > >> > > nVidia 6200 will allow OpenGL to run fast enough for something > >> > > like TuxRacer. > >> > > > >> > > I chose XFCE for the desktop along with both Abiword and > >> > > OpenOffice. I probably should have installed OOo from a binary > >> > > package, but I decided to build it just to see how long it > >> > > would take (so far it's at about 26 hours and counting). > >> > > >> > if you don't need any special features, kde+koffice needs less ram > >> > than xfce+openoffice. > >> > > >> > And installing ooo from source is unsupport. The build breaks all the > >> > time and > >> > you don't get anything from it. All it does is starting a second > >> > faster. It does not need less ram nor does it run faster. > >> > >> "installing ooo from source is unsupport" How is this? Maybe you > >> missundertand i think he run emerge openoffice and not openoffice-bin > > > > http://marc.info/?l=linux-kernel&m=123104511608102&w=2 > > I think that (old) mask quoted in that person's message is because > OpenOffice before 2.0.4 did not support 64-bit compiling at all. openoffice 3 isn't better.. yeah, it compiles in 64bit - sometimes. ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 31+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-user] Tips/Tricks for Gentoo on low-spec computer? 2009-01-20 17:56 ` Volker Armin Hemmann @ 2009-01-20 18:00 ` s3b4sm4gr1 2009-01-21 1:00 ` Dale 0 siblings, 1 reply; 31+ messages in thread From: s3b4sm4gr1 @ 2009-01-20 18:00 UTC (permalink / raw To: gentoo-user [-- Attachment #1: Type: text/plain, Size: 2848 bytes --] 2009/1/21 Volker Armin Hemmann <volkerarmin@googlemail.com> > On Dienstag 20 Januar 2009, Paul Hartman wrote: > > On Tue, Jan 20, 2009 at 11:27 AM, Volker Armin Hemmann > > > > <volkerarmin@googlemail.com> wrote: > > > On Dienstag 20 Januar 2009, Alejandro wrote: > > >> 2009/1/20 Volker Armin Hemmann <volkerarmin@googlemail.com> > > >> > > >> > On Dienstag 20 Januar 2009, Grant Edwards wrote: > > >> > > I'm in the process of installing Gentoo on a rather old > > >> > > machine. It's an old HP Pavilion with a 450MHz Celeron > > >> > > Mendocino and 256MB of PC133 SDRAM. I'm using an nVidia PCI > > >> > > FX6200 video board instead of the i810 on-board chip, and it's > > >> > > got a decent hard drive (160GB). > > >> > > > > >> > > I was wondering if there were any particular tips/tricks for > > >> > > getting the best performance out of such a machine. It's to be > > >> > > used for basic word processing and a few games. Hopefully the > > >> > > nVidia 6200 will allow OpenGL to run fast enough for something > > >> > > like TuxRacer. > > >> > > > > >> > > I chose XFCE for the desktop along with both Abiword and > > >> > > OpenOffice. I probably should have installed OOo from a binary > > >> > > package, but I decided to build it just to see how long it > > >> > > would take (so far it's at about 26 hours and counting). > > >> > > > >> > if you don't need any special features, kde+koffice needs less ram > > >> > than xfce+openoffice. > > >> > > > >> > And installing ooo from source is unsupport. The build breaks all > the > > >> > time and > > >> > you don't get anything from it. All it does is starting a second > > >> > faster. It does not need less ram nor does it run faster. > > >> > > >> "installing ooo from source is unsupport" How is this? Maybe you > > >> missundertand i think he run emerge openoffice and not openoffice-bin > > > > > > http://marc.info/?l=linux-kernel&m=123104511608102&w=2 > > > > I think that (old) mask quoted in that person's message is because > > OpenOffice before 2.0.4 did not support 64-bit compiling at all. > > openoffice 3 isn't better.. yeah, it compiles in 64bit - sometimes. > > > You should consider using LXDE as DE, which is designed for low memory and CPU usage... I'm currently using it on a Celeron Coppermine @ 600Mhz with 256 of PC133 RAM and it goes fine, among with abiword, gnumeric and claws-mail for the office work, consonance for music playing, and pidgin and conspire for Instant Messaging... Regards... -- En el pasado creímos que se nos acababa el petróleo, pero en realidad lo que se nos acababan eran las IDEAS. http://www.lacomunidadpetrolera.com Gentoo/* (Linux #455615) www.gentoove.org 53:04:4e:b5:f9:7e:4a:fb:66:a2:19:12:da:d5:97:f8 8A3A C955 715D D88A 87CD E21F F827 ADD7 F589 B4A4 Sebastian Magrí (sebasmagri) <sebasmagri_at_gmail_dot_com> [-- Attachment #2: Type: text/html, Size: 4122 bytes --] ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 31+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-user] Tips/Tricks for Gentoo on low-spec computer? 2009-01-20 18:00 ` s3b4sm4gr1 @ 2009-01-21 1:00 ` Dale 2009-01-24 14:53 ` Steven Lembark 0 siblings, 1 reply; 31+ messages in thread From: Dale @ 2009-01-21 1:00 UTC (permalink / raw To: gentoo-user s3b4sm4gr1 wrote: > > > > You should consider using LXDE as DE, which is designed for low memory > and CPU usage... > > I'm currently using it on a Celeron Coppermine @ 600Mhz with 256 of > PC133 RAM and it goes fine, among with abiword, gnumeric and > claws-mail for the office work, consonance for music playing, and > pidgin and conspire for Instant Messaging... > > Regards... > > > -- > En el pasado creímos que se nos acababa > el petróleo, pero en realidad lo que se nos > acababan eran las IDEAS. > http://www.lacomunidadpetrolera.com > Gentoo/* (Linux #455615) www.gentoove.org <http://www.gentoove.org> > 53:04:4e:b5:f9:7e:4a:fb:66:a2:19:12:da:d5:97:f8 > 8A3A C955 715D D88A 87CD E21F F827 ADD7 F589 B4A4 > Sebastian Magrí (sebasmagri) <sebasmagri_at_gmail_dot_com> > OK folks, all have a seat please. I ran a full blown KDE on a 133Mhz machine with 256Mbs of ram. A friend if mine played Solitaire on it and it worked well. It even had sound on it. Yea, it took a while to boot but I told him this is Linux, just leave it running 24/7. Worked until the house burned down. Close your mouths, you are catching flies. LOL Dale :-) :-) ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 31+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-user] Tips/Tricks for Gentoo on low-spec computer? 2009-01-21 1:00 ` Dale @ 2009-01-24 14:53 ` Steven Lembark 2009-01-24 15:55 ` Dale 0 siblings, 1 reply; 31+ messages in thread From: Steven Lembark @ 2009-01-24 14:53 UTC (permalink / raw To: gentoo-user > OK folks, all have a seat please. I ran a full blown KDE on a 133Mhz > machine with 256Mbs of ram. A friend if mine played Solitaire on it and > it worked well. It even had sound on it. I started running fvwm on a 486 w/ 16MB of core and a pair of 20MB disk drives (one RLL one MFM). Face it: we've all become addicted to amounts of RAM that didn't even exist on the planet 25 years ago, let alone disk :-) -- Steven Lembark 85-09 90th St. Workhorse Computing Woodhaven, NY, 11421 lembark@wrkhors.com +1 888 359 3508 ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 31+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-user] Tips/Tricks for Gentoo on low-spec computer? 2009-01-24 14:53 ` Steven Lembark @ 2009-01-24 15:55 ` Dale 0 siblings, 0 replies; 31+ messages in thread From: Dale @ 2009-01-24 15:55 UTC (permalink / raw To: gentoo-user Steven Lembark wrote: >> OK folks, all have a seat please. I ran a full blown KDE on a 133Mhz >> machine with 256Mbs of ram. A friend if mine played Solitaire on it and >> it worked well. It even had sound on it. >> > > I started running fvwm on a 486 w/ 16MB of core and > a pair of 20MB disk drives (one RLL one MFM). Face > it: we've all become addicted to amounts of RAM that > didn't even exist on the planet 25 years ago, let > alone disk :-) > > But when was this? Mine was about a year ago or so. Dale :-) :-) ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 31+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-user] Tips/Tricks for Gentoo on low-spec computer? 2009-01-20 17:05 Volker Armin Hemmann 2009-01-20 17:14 ` Paul Hartman 2009-01-20 17:15 ` Alejandro @ 2009-01-21 0:54 ` Dale 2 siblings, 0 replies; 31+ messages in thread From: Dale @ 2009-01-21 0:54 UTC (permalink / raw To: gentoo-user Volker Armin Hemmann wrote: > On Dienstag 20 Januar 2009, Grant Edwards wrote: > >> I'm in the process of installing Gentoo on a rather old >> machine. It's an old HP Pavilion with a 450MHz Celeron >> Mendocino and 256MB of PC133 SDRAM. I'm using an nVidia PCI >> FX6200 video board instead of the i810 on-board chip, and it's >> got a decent hard drive (160GB). >> >> I was wondering if there were any particular tips/tricks for >> getting the best performance out of such a machine. It's to be >> used for basic word processing and a few games. Hopefully the >> nVidia 6200 will allow OpenGL to run fast enough for something >> like TuxRacer. >> >> I chose XFCE for the desktop along with both Abiword and >> OpenOffice. I probably should have installed OOo from a binary >> package, but I decided to build it just to see how long it >> would take (so far it's at about 26 hours and counting). >> > > if you don't need any special features, kde+koffice needs less ram than > xfce+openoffice. > > And installing ooo from source is unsupport. The build breaks all the time and > you don't get anything from it. All it does is starting a second faster. It > does not need less ram nor does it run faster. > > > > It's funny, I have read a lot of people complain that the binary is the same way but compiling from source works. Interesting. The reason I was told I should compile my own is because it was more stable than the binary. How do you figure that OOo from source is not supported? Almost everything in Gentoo is from source. That's what Gentoo is, Linux From Scratch with a neat package manager. Very neat I might add. Dale :-) :-) ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 31+ messages in thread
end of thread, other threads:[~2009-01-24 15:55 UTC | newest] Thread overview: 31+ messages (download: mbox.gz follow: Atom feed -- links below jump to the message on this page -- 2009-01-20 16:46 [gentoo-user] Tips/Tricks for Gentoo on low-spec computer? Grant Edwards 2009-01-20 17:05 ` Paul Hartman 2009-01-20 17:11 ` Nick Cunningham 2009-01-20 17:36 ` [gentoo-user] " Grant Edwards 2009-01-20 17:38 ` [gentoo-user] " Mark Knecht 2009-01-20 20:36 ` [gentoo-user] Anxiousness? [was:Tips/Tricks for Gentoo on low-spec computer?] b.n. 2009-01-20 20:47 ` Paul Hartman 2009-01-20 21:16 ` Nick Cunningham 2009-01-20 21:33 ` Saphirus Sage 2009-01-21 0:28 ` Peter Alfredsen 2009-01-20 18:01 ` [gentoo-user] Tips/Tricks for Gentoo on low-spec computer? Dirk Heinrichs 2009-01-20 19:30 ` [gentoo-user] " Grant Edwards 2009-01-20 18:09 ` [gentoo-user] " kashani 2009-01-21 0:50 ` Dale 2009-01-24 14:40 ` Steven Lembark -- strict thread matches above, loose matches on Subject: below -- 2009-01-20 17:05 Volker Armin Hemmann 2009-01-20 17:14 ` Paul Hartman 2009-01-20 17:15 ` Alejandro 2009-01-20 17:22 ` Nick Cunningham 2009-01-20 17:32 ` Paul Hartman 2009-01-20 18:42 ` Neil Bothwick 2009-01-20 18:53 ` Dirk Heinrichs 2009-01-24 14:43 ` Steven Lembark 2009-01-20 17:27 ` Volker Armin Hemmann 2009-01-20 17:37 ` Paul Hartman 2009-01-20 17:56 ` Volker Armin Hemmann 2009-01-20 18:00 ` s3b4sm4gr1 2009-01-21 1:00 ` Dale 2009-01-24 14:53 ` Steven Lembark 2009-01-24 15:55 ` Dale 2009-01-21 0:54 ` Dale
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