* [gentoo-user] Running out of space on /var partition
@ 2011-07-25 10:02 Mick
2011-07-25 10:24 ` YoYo Siska
` (3 more replies)
0 siblings, 4 replies; 63+ messages in thread
From: Mick @ 2011-07-25 10:02 UTC (permalink / raw
To: gentoo-user
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After some deliberation I've started emerging libreoffice. It gave the usual
office suite warnings at the beginning that there isn't enough space in /var
(I have 5.8G and it was asking for more than 7G+).
Half way through the emerge I noticed that I have only 74M left and is going
down fast! O_O
OpenOffice was able to emerge in the past using this partition size without a
problem. I've flushed logs and what not to free some space, but I'm thinking
of extending the partition somehow. I don't run LVM on this machine so that's
not a solution for this circumstance.
Is there anything I can do with mount --rbind and could I do this in the
middle of an emerge? I have another partition with loads of space in it, but
it has a different fs on it (reiser4 instead of /var's ext4).
--
Regards,
Mick
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^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 63+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-user] Running out of space on /var partition
2011-07-25 10:02 [gentoo-user] Running out of space on /var partition Mick
@ 2011-07-25 10:24 ` YoYo Siska
2011-07-25 10:40 ` Mick
2011-07-25 11:03 ` Kfir Lavi
` (2 subsequent siblings)
3 siblings, 1 reply; 63+ messages in thread
From: YoYo Siska @ 2011-07-25 10:24 UTC (permalink / raw
To: gentoo-user
On Mon, Jul 25, 2011 at 11:02:34AM +0100, Mick wrote:
> After some deliberation I've started emerging libreoffice. It gave the usual
> office suite warnings at the beginning that there isn't enough space in /var
> (I have 5.8G and it was asking for more than 7G+).
>
> Half way through the emerge I noticed that I have only 74M left and is going
> down fast! O_O
>
> OpenOffice was able to emerge in the past using this partition size without a
> problem. I've flushed logs and what not to free some space, but I'm thinking
> of extending the partition somehow. I don't run LVM on this machine so that's
> not a solution for this circumstance.
>
> Is there anything I can do with mount --rbind and could I do this in the
> middle of an emerge? I have another partition with loads of space in it, but
> it has a different fs on it (reiser4 instead of /var's ext4).
You can mount --bind a dir from a large partition to /var/tmp/portage
before an emerge, but you can't do that during a running emerge. However
with a reasonable buildsystem, you could in theory stop the emerge, copy
over the files in /var/tmp/portage to new location (preserving
timestamps) and then try resuming the emerge with FEATURES="keepwork
noclean", though i don't know if that works well with openoffice...
Also you don't have to mount anything to /var/tmp/portage, you can just
change the dir by setting PORTAGE_TMPDIR to a directory on a partition
with enough space (I normally have my DISTDIR, PKGDIR and PORTAGE_TMP set
on a different partition...)
yoyo
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 63+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-user] Running out of space on /var partition
2011-07-25 10:24 ` YoYo Siska
@ 2011-07-25 10:40 ` Mick
2011-07-25 11:18 ` YoYo Siska
0 siblings, 1 reply; 63+ messages in thread
From: Mick @ 2011-07-25 10:40 UTC (permalink / raw
To: gentoo-user
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On Monday 25 Jul 2011 11:24:33 YoYo Siska wrote:
> On Mon, Jul 25, 2011 at 11:02:34AM +0100, Mick wrote:
> > After some deliberation I've started emerging libreoffice. It gave the
> > usual office suite warnings at the beginning that there isn't enough
> > space in /var (I have 5.8G and it was asking for more than 7G+).
> >
> > Half way through the emerge I noticed that I have only 74M left and is
> > going down fast! O_O
> >
> > OpenOffice was able to emerge in the past using this partition size
> > without a problem. I've flushed logs and what not to free some space,
> > but I'm thinking of extending the partition somehow. I don't run LVM on
> > this machine so that's not a solution for this circumstance.
> >
> > Is there anything I can do with mount --rbind and could I do this in the
> > middle of an emerge? I have another partition with loads of space in it,
> > but it has a different fs on it (reiser4 instead of /var's ext4).
>
> You can mount --bind a dir from a large partition to /var/tmp/portage
> before an emerge, but you can't do that during a running emerge. However
> with a reasonable buildsystem, you could in theory stop the emerge, copy
> over the files in /var/tmp/portage to new location (preserving
> timestamps) and then try resuming the emerge with FEATURES="keepwork
> noclean", though i don't know if that works well with openoffice...
>
> Also you don't have to mount anything to /var/tmp/portage, you can just
> change the dir by setting PORTAGE_TMPDIR to a directory on a partition
> with enough space (I normally have my DISTDIR, PKGDIR and PORTAGE_TMP set
> on a different partition...)
Oh yes! Of course, PORTAGE_TMPDIR .... what was I thinking?!!
Thank you.
I never understood properly how the mount --bind/rbind works. I understand
that the original partition content becomes visible on a second partition, but
I'm not at all sure what happens when the space on the first partition runs
out?
--
Regards,
Mick
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^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 63+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-user] Running out of space on /var partition
2011-07-25 10:02 [gentoo-user] Running out of space on /var partition Mick
2011-07-25 10:24 ` YoYo Siska
@ 2011-07-25 11:03 ` Kfir Lavi
2011-07-25 12:15 ` Alan McKinnon
2011-07-27 7:24 ` Alexander Puchmayr
3 siblings, 0 replies; 63+ messages in thread
From: Kfir Lavi @ 2011-07-25 11:03 UTC (permalink / raw
To: gentoo-user
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On Mon, Jul 25, 2011 at 1:02 PM, Mick <michaelkintzios@gmail.com> wrote:
> After some deliberation I've started emerging libreoffice. It gave the
> usual
> office suite warnings at the beginning that there isn't enough space in
> /var
> (I have 5.8G and it was asking for more than 7G+).
>
> Half way through the emerge I noticed that I have only 74M left and is
> going
> down fast! O_O
>
> OpenOffice was able to emerge in the past using this partition size without
> a
> problem. I've flushed logs and what not to free some space, but I'm
> thinking
> of extending the partition somehow. I don't run LVM on this machine so
> that's
> not a solution for this circumstance.
>
> Is there anything I can do with mount --rbind and could I do this in the
> middle of an emerge? I have another partition with loads of space in it,
> but
> it has a different fs on it (reiser4 instead of /var's ext4).
> --
> Regards,
> Mick
>
Copy /var/tmp/portage to the partition that you have space, then use 'bind'
command to mount.
Kfir
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^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 63+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-user] Running out of space on /var partition
2011-07-25 10:40 ` Mick
@ 2011-07-25 11:18 ` YoYo Siska
2011-07-25 11:39 ` Mick
0 siblings, 1 reply; 63+ messages in thread
From: YoYo Siska @ 2011-07-25 11:18 UTC (permalink / raw
To: gentoo-user
On Mon, Jul 25, 2011 at 11:40:55AM +0100, Mick wrote:
> On Monday 25 Jul 2011 11:24:33 YoYo Siska wrote:
> > On Mon, Jul 25, 2011 at 11:02:34AM +0100, Mick wrote:
> > > After some deliberation I've started emerging libreoffice. It gave the
> > > usual office suite warnings at the beginning that there isn't enough
> > > space in /var (I have 5.8G and it was asking for more than 7G+).
> > >
> > > Half way through the emerge I noticed that I have only 74M left and is
> > > going down fast! O_O
> > >
> > > OpenOffice was able to emerge in the past using this partition size
> > > without a problem. I've flushed logs and what not to free some space,
> > > but I'm thinking of extending the partition somehow. I don't run LVM on
> > > this machine so that's not a solution for this circumstance.
> > >
> > > Is there anything I can do with mount --rbind and could I do this in the
> > > middle of an emerge? I have another partition with loads of space in it,
> > > but it has a different fs on it (reiser4 instead of /var's ext4).
> >
> > You can mount --bind a dir from a large partition to /var/tmp/portage
> > before an emerge, but you can't do that during a running emerge. However
> > with a reasonable buildsystem, you could in theory stop the emerge, copy
> > over the files in /var/tmp/portage to new location (preserving
> > timestamps) and then try resuming the emerge with FEATURES="keepwork
> > noclean", though i don't know if that works well with openoffice...
> >
> > Also you don't have to mount anything to /var/tmp/portage, you can just
> > change the dir by setting PORTAGE_TMPDIR to a directory on a partition
> > with enough space (I normally have my DISTDIR, PKGDIR and PORTAGE_TMP set
> > on a different partition...)
>
> Oh yes! Of course, PORTAGE_TMPDIR .... what was I thinking?!!
>
> Thank you.
>
> I never understood properly how the mount --bind/rbind works. I understand
> that the original partition content becomes visible on a second partition, but
> I'm not at all sure what happens when the space on the first partition runs
> out?
Not "on a second partition" but under another "mount point" i.e. another
path... When you try to access a file by its filename, the kernel takes
the absolute file name, compares it to all the moutend "mount points",
takes the best match and tries to find (create) the file in that
filesystem/partition...
Lets say you do something like:
mount /dev/sda1 / (well... you don't actually do this... ;)
mount /dev/sda2 /mnt/sda2
mount --bind /mnt/sda2/bigtmp /tmp
Then path "/home/yoyo/something" is accessing file "home/yoyo/something"
on partition sda1.
The path "/mnt/sda2/somedir/somefile" is accessing file "somedir/somefile"
on partion sda2.
The path "/tmp/somedir/somefile" is accessing file
"bigtmp/somdir/somefile" on partition sda2.
The files (and free space) under /mnt/sda2 and /tmp are actually on
partition sda2, everything else is on sda1...
So if sda1 runs out of space (by writing to other places than /mnt/sda2
and /tmp), it doesn't in any any way affect /mnt/sda2 and /tmp which
have their free space from sda2. Conversely if you fill up sda2 by
writing to /tmp, your "system" partition still has free space ;)
yoyo
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 63+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-user] Running out of space on /var partition
2011-07-25 11:18 ` YoYo Siska
@ 2011-07-25 11:39 ` Mick
0 siblings, 0 replies; 63+ messages in thread
From: Mick @ 2011-07-25 11:39 UTC (permalink / raw
To: gentoo-user
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On Monday 25 Jul 2011 12:18:34 YoYo Siska wrote:
> On Mon, Jul 25, 2011 at 11:40:55AM +0100, Mick wrote:
> > I never understood properly how the mount --bind/rbind works. I
> > understand that the original partition content becomes visible on a
> > second partition, but I'm not at all sure what happens when the space on
> > the first partition runs out?
>
> Not "on a second partition" but under another "mount point" i.e. another
> path... When you try to access a file by its filename, the kernel takes
> the absolute file name, compares it to all the moutend "mount points",
> takes the best match and tries to find (create) the file in that
> filesystem/partition...
>
> Lets say you do something like:
>
> mount /dev/sda1 / (well... you don't actually do this... ;)
> mount /dev/sda2 /mnt/sda2
> mount --bind /mnt/sda2/bigtmp /tmp
>
> Then path "/home/yoyo/something" is accessing file "home/yoyo/something"
> on partition sda1.
>
> The path "/mnt/sda2/somedir/somefile" is accessing file "somedir/somefile"
> on partion sda2.
>
> The path "/tmp/somedir/somefile" is accessing file
> "bigtmp/somdir/somefile" on partition sda2.
>
>
> The files (and free space) under /mnt/sda2 and /tmp are actually on
> partition sda2, everything else is on sda1...
>
>
> So if sda1 runs out of space (by writing to other places than /mnt/sda2
> and /tmp), it doesn't in any any way affect /mnt/sda2 and /tmp which
> have their free space from sda2. Conversely if you fill up sda2 by
> writing to /tmp, your "system" partition still has free space ;)
>
>
> yoyo
I think I got it. Thanks!
--
Regards,
Mick
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^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 63+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-user] Running out of space on /var partition
2011-07-25 10:02 [gentoo-user] Running out of space on /var partition Mick
2011-07-25 10:24 ` YoYo Siska
2011-07-25 11:03 ` Kfir Lavi
@ 2011-07-25 12:15 ` Alan McKinnon
2011-07-27 7:24 ` Alexander Puchmayr
3 siblings, 0 replies; 63+ messages in thread
From: Alan McKinnon @ 2011-07-25 12:15 UTC (permalink / raw
To: gentoo-user; +Cc: Mick
On Monday 25 July 2011 11:02:34 Mick did opine thusly:
> After some deliberation I've started emerging libreoffice. It gave
> the usual office suite warnings at the beginning that there isn't
> enough space in /var (I have 5.8G and it was asking for more than
> 7G+).
>
> Half way through the emerge I noticed that I have only 74M left and
> is going down fast! O_O
>
> OpenOffice was able to emerge in the past using this partition size
> without a problem. I've flushed logs and what not to free some
> space, but I'm thinking of extending the partition somehow. I
> don't run LVM on this machine so that's not a solution for this
> circumstance.
>
> Is there anything I can do with mount --rbind and could I do this in
> the middle of an emerge? I have another partition with loads of
> space in it, but it has a different fs on it (reiser4 instead of
> /var's ext4).
Mount that spare partition at /var/tmp/portage
emerge openoffice
umount that spare partition
--
alan dot mckinnon at gmail dot com
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 63+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-user] Running out of space on /var partition
2011-07-25 10:02 [gentoo-user] Running out of space on /var partition Mick
` (2 preceding siblings ...)
2011-07-25 12:15 ` Alan McKinnon
@ 2011-07-27 7:24 ` Alexander Puchmayr
2011-07-27 13:23 ` Mick
3 siblings, 1 reply; 63+ messages in thread
From: Alexander Puchmayr @ 2011-07-27 7:24 UTC (permalink / raw
To: gentoo-user
Depending on your available ram and swap space, you might want to mount
/var/tmp/portage as tmpfs. My fstab entry shows
none /var/tmp/portage tmpfs size=10g,nr_inodes=1m
I have 4GB ram, and the speed benefit especially for open/libre-office is quite
impressive.
The advantage is, that it
a) uses only as much of memory as is really used
b) you may use mount option -remount to increase the size of the filesystem,
and add proper swapfiles if you see that you're running out of space (mkswap,
swapon)
Greetings,
Alex
Am Montag, 25. Juli 2011, 12:02:34 schrieb Mick:
> After some deliberation I've started emerging libreoffice. It gave the
> usual office suite warnings at the beginning that there isn't enough space
> in /var (I have 5.8G and it was asking for more than 7G+).
>
> Half way through the emerge I noticed that I have only 74M left and is
> going down fast! O_O
>
> OpenOffice was able to emerge in the past using this partition size without
> a problem. I've flushed logs and what not to free some space, but I'm
> thinking of extending the partition somehow. I don't run LVM on this
> machine so that's not a solution for this circumstance.
>
> Is there anything I can do with mount --rbind and could I do this in the
> middle of an emerge? I have another partition with loads of space in it,
> but it has a different fs on it (reiser4 instead of /var's ext4).
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 63+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-user] Running out of space on /var partition
2011-07-27 7:24 ` Alexander Puchmayr
@ 2011-07-27 13:23 ` Mick
2011-07-27 13:29 ` Michael Mol
0 siblings, 1 reply; 63+ messages in thread
From: Mick @ 2011-07-27 13:23 UTC (permalink / raw
To: gentoo-user
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On Wednesday 27 Jul 2011 08:24:37 Alexander Puchmayr wrote:
> Depending on your available ram and swap space, you might want to mount
> /var/tmp/portage as tmpfs. My fstab entry shows
>
> none /var/tmp/portage tmpfs
> size=10g,nr_inodes=1m
>
> I have 4GB ram, and the speed benefit especially for open/libre-office is
> quite impressive.
>
> The advantage is, that it
> a) uses only as much of memory as is really used
> b) you may use mount option -remount to increase the size of the
> filesystem, and add proper swapfiles if you see that you're running out of
> space (mkswap, swapon)
I also only have 4G of RAM and libreoffice seems to need more than 7-8G of
/var/tmp/portage to compile and build. OOo does it in less that 5G.
What will libreoffice do if /var/tmp/portage is a tmpfs? Start swapping like
mad?
--
Regards,
Mick
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^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 63+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-user] Running out of space on /var partition
2011-07-27 13:23 ` Mick
@ 2011-07-27 13:29 ` Michael Mol
2011-07-27 13:41 ` Peter Humphrey
0 siblings, 1 reply; 63+ messages in thread
From: Michael Mol @ 2011-07-27 13:29 UTC (permalink / raw
To: gentoo-user
On Wed, Jul 27, 2011 at 9:23 AM, Mick <michaelkintzios@gmail.com> wrote:
> On Wednesday 27 Jul 2011 08:24:37 Alexander Puchmayr wrote:
>> Depending on your available ram and swap space, you might want to mount
>> /var/tmp/portage as tmpfs. My fstab entry shows
>>
>> none /var/tmp/portage tmpfs
>> size=10g,nr_inodes=1m
>>
>> I have 4GB ram, and the speed benefit especially for open/libre-office is
>> quite impressive.
>>
>> The advantage is, that it
>> a) uses only as much of memory as is really used
>> b) you may use mount option -remount to increase the size of the
>> filesystem, and add proper swapfiles if you see that you're running out of
>> space (mkswap, swapon)
>
> I also only have 4G of RAM and libreoffice seems to need more than 7-8G of
> /var/tmp/portage to compile and build. OOo does it in less that 5G.
>
> What will libreoffice do if /var/tmp/portage is a tmpfs? Start swapping like
> mad?
No; the tmpfs runs out of space, and the build fails. Had that happen
with Thunderbird, and thus ended my usage of tmpfs for /var/tmp. I'll
probably go back to using tmpfs there once I've bumped my machine up
to the motherboard's max of 16GB of RAM.
--
:wq
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 63+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-user] Running out of space on /var partition
2011-07-27 13:29 ` Michael Mol
@ 2011-07-27 13:41 ` Peter Humphrey
2011-07-27 13:55 ` Michael Mol
2011-07-27 14:40 ` Neil Bothwick
0 siblings, 2 replies; 63+ messages in thread
From: Peter Humphrey @ 2011-07-27 13:41 UTC (permalink / raw
To: gentoo-user
On Wednesday 27 July 2011 14:29:12 Michael Mol wrote:
> On Wed, Jul 27, 2011 at 9:23 AM, Mick <michaelkintzios@gmail.com> wrote:
> > What will libreoffice do if /var/tmp/portage is a tmpfs? Start
> > swapping like mad?
>
> No; the tmpfs runs out of space, and the build fails. Had that happen
> with Thunderbird, and thus ended my usage of tmpfs for /var/tmp.
Doesn't do that here. When tmpfs is full it starts being swapped out to the
swap partition. Perhaps you didn't have any swap at the time.
--
Rgds
Peter Linux Counter number 5290
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 63+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-user] Running out of space on /var partition
2011-07-27 13:41 ` Peter Humphrey
@ 2011-07-27 13:55 ` Michael Mol
2011-07-27 14:40 ` Neil Bothwick
1 sibling, 0 replies; 63+ messages in thread
From: Michael Mol @ 2011-07-27 13:55 UTC (permalink / raw
To: gentoo-user
On Wed, Jul 27, 2011 at 9:41 AM, Peter Humphrey
<peter@humphrey.ukfsn.org> wrote:
> On Wednesday 27 July 2011 14:29:12 Michael Mol wrote:
>> On Wed, Jul 27, 2011 at 9:23 AM, Mick <michaelkintzios@gmail.com> wrote:
>> > What will libreoffice do if /var/tmp/portage is a tmpfs? Start
>> > swapping like mad?
>>
>> No; the tmpfs runs out of space, and the build fails. Had that happen
>> with Thunderbird, and thus ended my usage of tmpfs for /var/tmp.
>
> Doesn't do that here. When tmpfs is full it starts being swapped out to the
> swap partition. Perhaps you didn't have any swap at the time.
Possible. With 6-8GB of RAM, I've generally not needed it.
--
:wq
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 63+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-user] Running out of space on /var partition
2011-07-27 13:41 ` Peter Humphrey
2011-07-27 13:55 ` Michael Mol
@ 2011-07-27 14:40 ` Neil Bothwick
2011-07-27 14:52 ` Dale
` (2 more replies)
1 sibling, 3 replies; 63+ messages in thread
From: Neil Bothwick @ 2011-07-27 14:40 UTC (permalink / raw
To: gentoo-user
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On Wed, 27 Jul 2011 14:41:33 +0100, Peter Humphrey wrote:
> Doesn't do that here. When tmpfs is full it starts being swapped out to
> the swap partition. Perhaps you didn't have any swap at the time.
The default size for a tmpfs filesystem is half the physical RAM, unless
you specify more as a mount option, it will never use significant
amounts of swap.
I wonder how effective tmpfs is for PORTAGE_TMPDIR as the builds that
need a lot of disk space can often require a fair bit of memory too, and
tmpfs is using it all.
--
Neil Bothwick
Nobody's perfect and since I'm nobody...!
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^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 63+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-user] Running out of space on /var partition
2011-07-27 14:40 ` Neil Bothwick
@ 2011-07-27 14:52 ` Dale
2011-07-27 14:52 ` Alan McKinnon
2011-07-27 15:01 ` Michael Mol
2 siblings, 0 replies; 63+ messages in thread
From: Dale @ 2011-07-27 14:52 UTC (permalink / raw
To: gentoo-user
Neil Bothwick wrote:
> On Wed, 27 Jul 2011 14:41:33 +0100, Peter Humphrey wrote:
>
>
>> Doesn't do that here. When tmpfs is full it starts being swapped out to
>> the swap partition. Perhaps you didn't have any swap at the time.
>>
> The default size for a tmpfs filesystem is half the physical RAM, unless
> you specify more as a mount option, it will never use significant
> amounts of swap.
>
> I wonder how effective tmpfs is for PORTAGE_TMPDIR as the builds that
> need a lot of disk space can often require a fair bit of memory too, and
> tmpfs is using it all.
>
>
>
I posted this somewhere but anyway. I tested this with my 16Gbs and
some fairly good size packages. Most of them took a little longer to
compile on tmpfs than it did on the hard drive. So, putting portage's
work directory on tmpfs doesn't help a bit.
Dale
:-) :-)
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 63+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-user] Running out of space on /var partition
2011-07-27 14:40 ` Neil Bothwick
2011-07-27 14:52 ` Dale
@ 2011-07-27 14:52 ` Alan McKinnon
2011-07-27 15:03 ` Michael Mol
2011-07-27 15:35 ` Neil Bothwick
2011-07-27 15:01 ` Michael Mol
2 siblings, 2 replies; 63+ messages in thread
From: Alan McKinnon @ 2011-07-27 14:52 UTC (permalink / raw
To: gentoo-user; +Cc: Neil Bothwick
On Wednesday 27 July 2011 15:40:03 Neil Bothwick did opine thusly:
> On Wed, 27 Jul 2011 14:41:33 +0100, Peter Humphrey wrote:
> > Doesn't do that here. When tmpfs is full it starts being swapped
> > out to the swap partition. Perhaps you didn't have any swap at
> > the time.
>
> The default size for a tmpfs filesystem is half the physical RAM,
> unless you specify more as a mount option, it will never use
> significant amounts of swap.
>
> I wonder how effective tmpfs is for PORTAGE_TMPDIR as the builds
> that need a lot of disk space can often require a fair bit of
> memory too, and tmpfs is using it all.
In this last week someone reported doing actually measurements and
found that using a tmpfs was actually slower.
--
alan dot mckinnon at gmail dot com
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 63+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-user] Running out of space on /var partition
2011-07-27 14:40 ` Neil Bothwick
2011-07-27 14:52 ` Dale
2011-07-27 14:52 ` Alan McKinnon
@ 2011-07-27 15:01 ` Michael Mol
2011-07-28 0:47 ` [gentoo-user] " walt
2 siblings, 1 reply; 63+ messages in thread
From: Michael Mol @ 2011-07-27 15:01 UTC (permalink / raw
To: gentoo-user
On Wed, Jul 27, 2011 at 10:40 AM, Neil Bothwick <neil@digimed.co.uk> wrote:
> On Wed, 27 Jul 2011 14:41:33 +0100, Peter Humphrey wrote:
>
>> Doesn't do that here. When tmpfs is full it starts being swapped out to
>> the swap partition. Perhaps you didn't have any swap at the time.
>
> The default size for a tmpfs filesystem is half the physical RAM, unless
> you specify more as a mount option, it will never use significant
> amounts of swap.
>
> I wonder how effective tmpfs is for PORTAGE_TMPDIR as the builds that
> need a lot of disk space can often require a fair bit of memory too, and
> tmpfs is using it all.
portage (by default) cleans up after itself after each ebuild, so
there's no leakage across ebuilds, but yeah; if you don't have enough
RAM for it, stuffing your files and your active processes in the RAM
won't work. That's a pretty simple concept.
tmpfs for PORTAGE_TMPDIR is great, as long as you have the RAM for it.
When I first started using Gentoo, I did. Lately, builds have gotten
large enough (especially when I added -ggdb to CFLAGS) that I had to
stop using it.
However, I can see an argument for tmpfs to still be useful, even if
you don't have enough RAM for it, but you do have swap space. If you
allow tmpfs to be backed by swap, you can avoid the (unnecessary in
this case) bookkeeping done by normal disk filesystems like
ext{2|3|4}. So long as your swap partition is as fast as the partition
your erstwhile disk filesystem sits on, it'd be a theoretical gain.
(Though if you're using a swap *file* as opposed to a swap partition,
you'd lose that gain. So YMMV.)
With that in mind, I think I'll re-enable tmpfs when I get home, and
set it to act as a 16GB filesystem. I only have 6GB of RAM, but tmpfs
won't consume more RAM than it has data to fill pages, and the use of
swap shouldn't be terrible.
My understanding of tmpfs is that it's implemented as a thin layer on
top of the file page cache, and that as active processes need more
RAM, the file page cache is the first thing to be sacrificed, being
flushed to disk. (Presumably, in the case of tmpfs, 'disk' would be
'swap') So truly active process memory should have no more trouble
remaining in physical RAM than if tmpfs weren't there; if tmpfs
weren't there, the data would still sit in the file cache, but would
have to pass through a filesystem like ext{2|3|4} (or whatever) on its
way to disk.
--
:wq
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 63+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-user] Running out of space on /var partition
2011-07-27 14:52 ` Alan McKinnon
@ 2011-07-27 15:03 ` Michael Mol
2011-07-27 15:35 ` Neil Bothwick
1 sibling, 0 replies; 63+ messages in thread
From: Michael Mol @ 2011-07-27 15:03 UTC (permalink / raw
To: gentoo-user
On Wed, Jul 27, 2011 at 10:52 AM, Alan McKinnon <alan.mckinnon@gmail.com> wrote:
> On Wednesday 27 July 2011 15:40:03 Neil Bothwick did opine thusly:
>> On Wed, 27 Jul 2011 14:41:33 +0100, Peter Humphrey wrote:
>> > Doesn't do that here. When tmpfs is full it starts being swapped
>> > out to the swap partition. Perhaps you didn't have any swap at
>> > the time.
>>
>> The default size for a tmpfs filesystem is half the physical RAM,
>> unless you specify more as a mount option, it will never use
>> significant amounts of swap.
>>
>> I wonder how effective tmpfs is for PORTAGE_TMPDIR as the builds
>> that need a lot of disk space can often require a fair bit of
>> memory too, and tmpfs is using it all.
>
> In this last week someone reported doing actually measurements and
> found that using a tmpfs was actually slower.
Hm. I wonder why that is; it seems counterintuitive to my
understanding of how tmpfs is implemented wrt the kernel's caching.
But I haven't red up on that in years.
--
:wq
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 63+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-user] Running out of space on /var partition
2011-07-27 14:52 ` Alan McKinnon
2011-07-27 15:03 ` Michael Mol
@ 2011-07-27 15:35 ` Neil Bothwick
2011-07-27 15:58 ` Dale
2011-07-28 7:05 ` Joost Roeleveld
1 sibling, 2 replies; 63+ messages in thread
From: Neil Bothwick @ 2011-07-27 15:35 UTC (permalink / raw
To: gentoo-user
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On Wed, 27 Jul 2011 16:52:53 +0200, Alan McKinnon wrote:
> > I wonder how effective tmpfs is for PORTAGE_TMPDIR as the builds
> > that need a lot of disk space can often require a fair bit of
> > memory too, and tmpfs is using it all.
>
> In this last week someone reported doing actually measurements and
> found that using a tmpfs was actually slower.
Yes, but that was Dale and nothing works as it should for him :-O
--
Neil Bothwick
I work with User-Surly Software.
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^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 63+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-user] Running out of space on /var partition
2011-07-27 15:35 ` Neil Bothwick
@ 2011-07-27 15:58 ` Dale
2011-07-27 20:44 ` Neil Bothwick
2011-07-28 7:05 ` Joost Roeleveld
1 sibling, 1 reply; 63+ messages in thread
From: Dale @ 2011-07-27 15:58 UTC (permalink / raw
To: gentoo-user
Neil Bothwick wrote:
> On Wed, 27 Jul 2011 16:52:53 +0200, Alan McKinnon wrote:
>
>
>>> I wonder how effective tmpfs is for PORTAGE_TMPDIR as the builds
>>> that need a lot of disk space can often require a fair bit of
>>> memory too, and tmpfs is using it all.
>>>
>> In this last week someone reported doing actually measurements and
>> found that using a tmpfs was actually slower.
>>
> Yes, but that was Dale and nothing works as it should for him :-O
>
>
>
That one did. Someone on the forums posted the same results. It
doesn't make sense but . . . .
I can also say that I done a .35 kernel from scratch and can now
download videos. So, I'm working again. :-P
Dale
:-) :-)
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 63+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-user] Running out of space on /var partition
2011-07-27 15:58 ` Dale
@ 2011-07-27 20:44 ` Neil Bothwick
2011-07-27 20:54 ` Michael Mol
2011-07-27 21:07 ` Dale
0 siblings, 2 replies; 63+ messages in thread
From: Neil Bothwick @ 2011-07-27 20:44 UTC (permalink / raw
To: gentoo-user
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On Wed, 27 Jul 2011 10:58:28 -0500, Dale wrote:
> >>> I wonder how effective tmpfs is for PORTAGE_TMPDIR as the builds
> >>> that need a lot of disk space can often require a fair bit of
> >>> memory too, and tmpfs is using it all.
> >>>
> >> In this last week someone reported doing actually measurements and
> >> found that using a tmpfs was actually slower.
> >>
> > Yes, but that was Dale and nothing works as it should for him :-O
> That one did. Someone on the forums posted the same results. It
> doesn't make sense but . . . .
It makes sense because the ramdisk is using memory that would otherwise
be used for compilation and filesystem caches.
--
Neil Bothwick
NOTICE:
-- THE ELEVATORS WILL BE OUT OF ORDER TODAY --
(The nearest working elevators are in the building
across the street.)
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^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 63+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-user] Running out of space on /var partition
2011-07-27 20:44 ` Neil Bothwick
@ 2011-07-27 20:54 ` Michael Mol
2011-07-27 22:35 ` Neil Bothwick
2011-07-27 21:07 ` Dale
1 sibling, 1 reply; 63+ messages in thread
From: Michael Mol @ 2011-07-27 20:54 UTC (permalink / raw
To: gentoo-user
On Wed, Jul 27, 2011 at 4:44 PM, Neil Bothwick <neil@digimed.co.uk> wrote:
> On Wed, 27 Jul 2011 10:58:28 -0500, Dale wrote:
>
>> >>> I wonder how effective tmpfs is for PORTAGE_TMPDIR as the builds
>> >>> that need a lot of disk space can often require a fair bit of
>> >>> memory too, and tmpfs is using it all.
>> >>>
>> >> In this last week someone reported doing actually measurements and
>> >> found that using a tmpfs was actually slower.
>> >>
>> > Yes, but that was Dale and nothing works as it should for him :-O
>
>> That one did. Someone on the forums posted the same results. It
>> doesn't make sense but . . . .
>
> It makes sense because the ramdisk is using memory that would otherwise
> be used for compilation and filesystem caches.
tmpfs isn't implemented as a ramdisk, it's implemented as a thin layer
on top of the filesystem cache.
--
:wq
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 63+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-user] Running out of space on /var partition
2011-07-27 20:44 ` Neil Bothwick
2011-07-27 20:54 ` Michael Mol
@ 2011-07-27 21:07 ` Dale
2011-07-27 21:30 ` Michael Mol
2011-07-27 22:37 ` Neil Bothwick
1 sibling, 2 replies; 63+ messages in thread
From: Dale @ 2011-07-27 21:07 UTC (permalink / raw
To: gentoo-user
Neil Bothwick wrote:
> On Wed, 27 Jul 2011 10:58:28 -0500, Dale wrote:
>
>
>>>>> I wonder how effective tmpfs is for PORTAGE_TMPDIR as the builds
>>>>> that need a lot of disk space can often require a fair bit of
>>>>> memory too, and tmpfs is using it all.
>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>> In this last week someone reported doing actually measurements and
>>>> found that using a tmpfs was actually slower.
>>>>
>>>>
>>> Yes, but that was Dale and nothing works as it should for him :-O
>>>
>
>> That one did. Someone on the forums posted the same results. It
>> doesn't make sense but . . . .
>>
> It makes sense because the ramdisk is using memory that would otherwise
> be used for compilation and filesystem caches.
>
>
>
I have 16Gbs here. It's not like I'm going to run out or anything. I
can put half on tmpfs and still have 8Gbs left. That is more than
enough to compile even OOo with no space problems.
Thoughts?
Dale
:-) :-)
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 63+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-user] Running out of space on /var partition
2011-07-27 21:07 ` Dale
@ 2011-07-27 21:30 ` Michael Mol
2011-07-27 21:51 ` Dale
` (2 more replies)
2011-07-27 22:37 ` Neil Bothwick
1 sibling, 3 replies; 63+ messages in thread
From: Michael Mol @ 2011-07-27 21:30 UTC (permalink / raw
To: gentoo-user
On Wed, Jul 27, 2011 at 5:07 PM, Dale <rdalek1967@gmail.com> wrote:
> Neil Bothwick wrote:
>>
>> On Wed, 27 Jul 2011 10:58:28 -0500, Dale wrote:
>>
>
> I have 16Gbs here. It's not like I'm going to run out or anything. I can
> put half on tmpfs and still have 8Gbs left. That is more than enough to
> compile even OOo with no space problems.
>
> Thoughts?
This is Gentoo, where all us users are reputed to spend their days
passing around benchmarks of "emerge -e world", right?
Try it. :)
--
:wq
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 63+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-user] Running out of space on /var partition
2011-07-27 21:30 ` Michael Mol
@ 2011-07-27 21:51 ` Dale
2011-07-27 22:14 ` Joshua Murphy
2011-07-28 9:46 ` Kfir Lavi
2011-07-28 20:10 ` Dale
2 siblings, 1 reply; 63+ messages in thread
From: Dale @ 2011-07-27 21:51 UTC (permalink / raw
To: gentoo-user
Michael Mol wrote:
> On Wed, Jul 27, 2011 at 5:07 PM, Dale<rdalek1967@gmail.com> wrote:
>
>> Neil Bothwick wrote:
>>
>>> On Wed, 27 Jul 2011 10:58:28 -0500, Dale wrote:
>>>
>>>
>> I have 16Gbs here. It's not like I'm going to run out or anything. I can
>> put half on tmpfs and still have 8Gbs left. That is more than enough to
>> compile even OOo with no space problems.
>>
>> Thoughts?
>>
> This is Gentoo, where all us users are reputed to spend their days
> passing around benchmarks of "emerge -e world", right?
>
> Try it. :)
>
>
>
Yep, we do that. Mine is about 12 hours. I would post it but I got a
Blocker instead. I'll work on that and post it later. lol
Point is, I have more than enough memory to test the theory that putting
portage's work directory on tmpfs is faster/slower than a hard drive. I
tested it and it really didn't make much difference. Most of the time
it was slower but a couple times it was faster but only by a few seconds.
I guess drives are just a lot faster nowadays or at least fast enough.
I dunno.
Dale
:-) :-)
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 63+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-user] Running out of space on /var partition
2011-07-27 21:51 ` Dale
@ 2011-07-27 22:14 ` Joshua Murphy
2011-07-27 22:28 ` Dale
0 siblings, 1 reply; 63+ messages in thread
From: Joshua Murphy @ 2011-07-27 22:14 UTC (permalink / raw
To: gentoo-user
On Wed, Jul 27, 2011 at 5:51 PM, Dale <rdalek1967@gmail.com> wrote:
> Michael Mol wrote:
>>
>> On Wed, Jul 27, 2011 at 5:07 PM, Dale<rdalek1967@gmail.com> wrote:
>>
>>>
>>> Neil Bothwick wrote:
>>>
>>>>
>>>> On Wed, 27 Jul 2011 10:58:28 -0500, Dale wrote:
>>>>
>>>>
>>>
>>> I have 16Gbs here. It's not like I'm going to run out or anything. I
>>> can
>>> put half on tmpfs and still have 8Gbs left. That is more than enough to
>>> compile even OOo with no space problems.
>>>
>>> Thoughts?
>>>
>>
>> This is Gentoo, where all us users are reputed to spend their days
>> passing around benchmarks of "emerge -e world", right?
>>
>> Try it. :)
>>
>>
>>
>
> Yep, we do that. Mine is about 12 hours. I would post it but I got a
> Blocker instead. I'll work on that and post it later. lol
>
> Point is, I have more than enough memory to test the theory that putting
> portage's work directory on tmpfs is faster/slower than a hard drive. I
> tested it and it really didn't make much difference. Most of the time it
> was slower but a couple times it was faster but only by a few seconds.
>
> I guess drives are just a lot faster nowadays or at least fast enough. I
> dunno.
>
> Dale
>
> :-) :-)
>
>
I would hazard a guess here that, rather than it being a benefit from
improvement in drive speeds, it's moreso an improvement in the
kernel's file caching. As I understand it (likely incorrectly) tmpfs
essentially does little more than inject the given file into the
filesystem cache, with a 'keep this here' flag attached to it. As
files are accessed on the disk, they're pulled into the filesystem
cache anyhow, and they stay there as long as they're being used and
there's room to keep them. With tmpfs, every file you put into it
stays until explicitly removed, wheras letting the kernel handle the
selected list of files in the cache only keeps the ones the kernel
feels are worth keeping. I am curious, though, whether *not* using
-pipe will actually improve performance when building in tmpfs, as
you're already sidestepping most of the overhead of creating files
with tmpfs, so piping data rather than using intermediate files just
creates extra memory usage overhead (which, while cheaper than disk
i/o and filesystem metadata updates, is still overhead).
Another likely source of performance loss in using tmpfs over physical
disk to hold the build is that, by design, tmpfs occupies a portion of
the filesystem cache. During a build, every header imported, every
library linked, and every process that runs to make it all come
together gets touched. When you touch files on disk, some or all of
them get pulled into the filesystem cache, so keeping the entire build
tree in the cache may well leave more frequently used files being
dropped from cache to trade back and forth between one another.
Again, all of this comes with a "I likely have no idea what I'm
talking about, but it sounds convincing" disclaimer.
:-)
--
Poison [BLX]
Joshua M. Murphy
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 63+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-user] Running out of space on /var partition
2011-07-27 22:14 ` Joshua Murphy
@ 2011-07-27 22:28 ` Dale
0 siblings, 0 replies; 63+ messages in thread
From: Dale @ 2011-07-27 22:28 UTC (permalink / raw
To: gentoo-user
Joshua Murphy wrote:
> On Wed, Jul 27, 2011 at 5:51 PM, Dale<rdalek1967@gmail.com> wrote:
>
>> Michael Mol wrote:
>>
>>> On Wed, Jul 27, 2011 at 5:07 PM, Dale<rdalek1967@gmail.com> wrote:
>>>
>>>
>>>> Neil Bothwick wrote:
>>>>
>>>>
>>>>> On Wed, 27 Jul 2011 10:58:28 -0500, Dale wrote:
>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>> I have 16Gbs here. It's not like I'm going to run out or anything. I
>>>> can
>>>> put half on tmpfs and still have 8Gbs left. That is more than enough to
>>>> compile even OOo with no space problems.
>>>>
>>>> Thoughts?
>>>>
>>>>
>>> This is Gentoo, where all us users are reputed to spend their days
>>> passing around benchmarks of "emerge -e world", right?
>>>
>>> Try it. :)
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>
>> Yep, we do that. Mine is about 12 hours. I would post it but I got a
>> Blocker instead. I'll work on that and post it later. lol
>>
>> Point is, I have more than enough memory to test the theory that putting
>> portage's work directory on tmpfs is faster/slower than a hard drive. I
>> tested it and it really didn't make much difference. Most of the time it
>> was slower but a couple times it was faster but only by a few seconds.
>>
>> I guess drives are just a lot faster nowadays or at least fast enough. I
>> dunno.
>>
>> Dale
>>
>> :-) :-)
>>
>>
>>
> I would hazard a guess here that, rather than it being a benefit from
> improvement in drive speeds, it's moreso an improvement in the
> kernel's file caching. As I understand it (likely incorrectly) tmpfs
> essentially does little more than inject the given file into the
> filesystem cache, with a 'keep this here' flag attached to it. As
> files are accessed on the disk, they're pulled into the filesystem
> cache anyhow, and they stay there as long as they're being used and
> there's room to keep them. With tmpfs, every file you put into it
> stays until explicitly removed, wheras letting the kernel handle the
> selected list of files in the cache only keeps the ones the kernel
> feels are worth keeping. I am curious, though, whether *not* using
> -pipe will actually improve performance when building in tmpfs, as
> you're already sidestepping most of the overhead of creating files
> with tmpfs, so piping data rather than using intermediate files just
> creates extra memory usage overhead (which, while cheaper than disk
> i/o and filesystem metadata updates, is still overhead).
>
> Another likely source of performance loss in using tmpfs over physical
> disk to hold the build is that, by design, tmpfs occupies a portion of
> the filesystem cache. During a build, every header imported, every
> library linked, and every process that runs to make it all come
> together gets touched. When you touch files on disk, some or all of
> them get pulled into the filesystem cache, so keeping the entire build
> tree in the cache may well leave more frequently used files being
> dropped from cache to trade back and forth between one another.
>
> Again, all of this comes with a "I likely have no idea what I'm
> talking about, but it sounds convincing" disclaimer.
>
> :-)
>
>
Sounds better than my "I dunno" tho. LOL
I know it doesn't make much sense tho, at least not based on what
several others thought would happen way back in the day. Back then,
very few people had enough ram to really test this. Those who did,
well, it may not be their machine to run the test. ;-)
I may test this again one day. All you have to do is create a set and
emerge it. Reboot to make sure the cache is cleaned 100%, mount tmpfs
and emerge the set again. Compare the times and see what hits the fan,
theory or reality. :/
Dale
:-) :-)
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 63+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-user] Running out of space on /var partition
2011-07-27 20:54 ` Michael Mol
@ 2011-07-27 22:35 ` Neil Bothwick
0 siblings, 0 replies; 63+ messages in thread
From: Neil Bothwick @ 2011-07-27 22:35 UTC (permalink / raw
To: gentoo-user
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On Wed, 27 Jul 2011 16:54:22 -0400, Michael Mol wrote:
> > It makes sense because the ramdisk is using memory that would
> > otherwise be used for compilation and filesystem caches.
>
> tmpfs isn't implemented as a ramdisk, it's implemented as a thin layer
> on top of the filesystem cache.
That's true, but it is still a storage device using RAM. The
implementation may be different but it still uses up memory that would
otherwise be available to the system. I stand by my comment, semantics
aside.
--
Neil Bothwick
Last yur I kudnt spel modjerater now I are won.
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^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 63+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-user] Running out of space on /var partition
2011-07-27 21:07 ` Dale
2011-07-27 21:30 ` Michael Mol
@ 2011-07-27 22:37 ` Neil Bothwick
2011-07-27 23:16 ` Dale
1 sibling, 1 reply; 63+ messages in thread
From: Neil Bothwick @ 2011-07-27 22:37 UTC (permalink / raw
To: gentoo-user
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On Wed, 27 Jul 2011 16:07:30 -0500, Dale wrote:
> > It makes sense because the ramdisk is using memory that would
> > otherwise be used for compilation and filesystem caches.
> I have 16Gbs here. It's not like I'm going to run out or anything. I
> can put half on tmpfs and still have 8Gbs left. That is more than
> enough to compile even OOo with no space problems.
I wasn't thinking of systems with that much memory. Like you, I'd expect
your system to be faster, even if not by much, using tmpfs.
--
Neil Bothwick
Physics is like sex: sure, it may give some practical results, but
that's not why we do it. Richard Feynman
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^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 63+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-user] Running out of space on /var partition
2011-07-27 22:37 ` Neil Bothwick
@ 2011-07-27 23:16 ` Dale
2011-07-27 23:37 ` Alex Schuster
2011-07-28 7:34 ` Neil Bothwick
0 siblings, 2 replies; 63+ messages in thread
From: Dale @ 2011-07-27 23:16 UTC (permalink / raw
To: gentoo-user
Neil Bothwick wrote:
> On Wed, 27 Jul 2011 16:07:30 -0500, Dale wrote:
>
>
>>> It makes sense because the ramdisk is using memory that would
>>> otherwise be used for compilation and filesystem caches.
>>>
>
>> I have 16Gbs here. It's not like I'm going to run out or anything. I
>> can put half on tmpfs and still have 8Gbs left. That is more than
>> enough to compile even OOo with no space problems.
>>
> I wasn't thinking of systems with that much memory. Like you, I'd expect
> your system to be faster, even if not by much, using tmpfs.
>
>
>
That's what I was expecting too. It is confusing for sure.
Speaking of tmpfs, I should have re-emerged OOo on tmpfs. It filled up
/var and died, just a few minutes before it would have finished. Oh
well, I'll make /var bigger next time. Maybe a couple more Gbs. I put
that http-replicator on here when I decided to keep my old rig up to
date and it just eats up my /var. I guess I could move http* directory
tho. ^_^
I really need to figure out this hard drive issue right now tho. That's
buggin me a lot.
Dale
:-) :-)
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 63+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-user] Running out of space on /var partition
2011-07-27 23:16 ` Dale
@ 2011-07-27 23:37 ` Alex Schuster
2011-07-28 0:19 ` Dale
2011-07-28 7:34 ` Neil Bothwick
1 sibling, 1 reply; 63+ messages in thread
From: Alex Schuster @ 2011-07-27 23:37 UTC (permalink / raw
To: gentoo-user
Dale writes:
> Neil Bothwick wrote:
>> I wasn't thinking of systems with that much memory. Like you, I'd expect
>> your system to be faster, even if not by much, using tmpfs.
> That's what I was expecting too. It is confusing for sure.
Years ago, I used tmpfs, and it was slightly faster, but on average only
few seconds in an hou-long emerge.
I don't use tmpfs any more, as 8G of RAM is barely enough to run KDe here.
> Speaking of tmpfs, I should have re-emerged OOo on tmpfs. It filled up
> /var and died, just a few minutes before it would have finished. Oh
> well, I'll make /var bigger next time. Maybe a couple more Gbs.
Well, if you were using LVM, this would take less than a minute:
lvresize -L +2G /dev/myVolumeGroup/myVarVolume
resize2fs /dev/myVolumeGroup/myVarVolume
> I put
> that http-replicator on here when I decided to keep my old rig up to
> date and it just eats up my /var. I guess I could move http* directory
> tho. ^_^
Sure, either by changing some config file, or crating a symlink to the
new location.
I have a partition for portage stuff (trees, distfiles, packages,
tmpdir), as I don't like my /var to become full just because I emerge
something large.
Wonko
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 63+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-user] Running out of space on /var partition
2011-07-27 23:37 ` Alex Schuster
@ 2011-07-28 0:19 ` Dale
2011-07-28 0:23 ` Dale
2011-07-28 1:09 ` Re: [gentoo-user] " Alex Schuster
0 siblings, 2 replies; 63+ messages in thread
From: Dale @ 2011-07-28 0:19 UTC (permalink / raw
To: gentoo-user
Alex Schuster wrote:
> Dale writes:
>> That's what I was expecting too. It is confusing for sure.
>>
> Years ago, I used tmpfs, and it was slightly faster, but on average only
> few seconds in an hou-long emerge.
>
> I don't use tmpfs any more, as 8G of RAM is barely enough to run KDe here.
>
>
I run KDE here and it uses less than 1Gbs all the time. Most of the
time it hovers around 1Gb with a lot of junk open. If your used 8Gbs,
you got a lot running or something. o_O
>> Speaking of tmpfs, I should have re-emerged OOo on tmpfs. It filled up
>> /var and died, just a few minutes before it would have finished. Oh
>> well, I'll make /var bigger next time. Maybe a couple more Gbs.
>>
> Well, if you were using LVM, this would take less than a minute:
>
> lvresize -L +2G /dev/myVolumeGroup/myVarVolume
> resize2fs /dev/myVolumeGroup/myVarVolume
>
>
Yea but I don't use LVM. I may one day but not today. I got enough
drive issues right now without adding another layer to it.
>> I put
>> that http-replicator on here when I decided to keep my old rig up to
>> date and it just eats up my /var. I guess I could move http* directory
>> tho. ^_^
>>
> Sure, either by changing some config file, or crating a symlink to the
> new location.
>
> I have a partition for portage stuff (trees, distfiles, packages,
> tmpdir), as I don't like my /var to become full just because I emerge
> something large.
>
> Wonko
>
>
I have a separate /boot, /usr/portage, /home and /var. I started to
make /var larger but didn't realize I was going to be using the
http-replicator thing. It would be nice to have LVM but that is water
under the bridge right now.
Dale
:-) :-)
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 63+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-user] Running out of space on /var partition
2011-07-28 0:19 ` Dale
@ 2011-07-28 0:23 ` Dale
2011-07-28 20:00 ` [gentoo-user] " walt
2011-07-28 1:09 ` Re: [gentoo-user] " Alex Schuster
1 sibling, 1 reply; 63+ messages in thread
From: Dale @ 2011-07-28 0:23 UTC (permalink / raw
To: gentoo-user
Dale wrote:
>
> I run KDE here and it uses less than 1Gbs all the time. Most of the
> time it hovers around 1Gb with a lot of junk open. If your used 8Gbs,
> you got a lot running or something. o_O
That should read "less than 2 Gbs all the time". I hit the wrong
button. lol
Dale
:-) :-)
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 63+ messages in thread
* [gentoo-user] Re: Running out of space on /var partition
2011-07-27 15:01 ` Michael Mol
@ 2011-07-28 0:47 ` walt
2011-07-28 15:26 ` Peter Humphrey
0 siblings, 1 reply; 63+ messages in thread
From: walt @ 2011-07-28 0:47 UTC (permalink / raw
To: gentoo-user
On 07/27/2011 08:01 AM, Michael Mol wrote:
> If you allow tmpfs to be backed by swap...
Does that require some extra configuration?
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 63+ messages in thread
* Re: Re: [gentoo-user] Running out of space on /var partition
2011-07-28 0:19 ` Dale
2011-07-28 0:23 ` Dale
@ 2011-07-28 1:09 ` Alex Schuster
2011-07-28 1:22 ` Dale
1 sibling, 1 reply; 63+ messages in thread
From: Alex Schuster @ 2011-07-28 1:09 UTC (permalink / raw
To: gentoo-user
Dale writes:
> Alex Schuster wrote:
> > I don't use tmpfs any more, as 8G of RAM is barely enough to run KDe
> > here.
>
> I run KDE here and it uses less than 1Gbs all the time. Most of the
> time it hovers around 1Gb with a lot of junk open. If your used 8Gbs,
> you got a lot running or something. o_O
I'm using 4.5G right now according to free -m (using the -/+ buffers/cache
entry). 550M for a Windows VM, 355M for Kontact, 350M for my TV-Browser
application, 200M for Firefox, incredible 165M for a Chromium instance, 155M
plasma-desktop. Oh, there's an emerge -a command waiting for me to confirm
it should run, 155M. virtuoso-t neds 150M, the same goes for Amarok, and
kwin is at 140 now. The rest is mainly more Chromium and Konqueror
processes, X, akonadi_nepomuk, apache2, kmymoney, the rest is less then 65M
each.
The system even starts swapping from time to time. 6G was not enough, things
are much better now that I have 8G. With 4, it became unusable after 1-2
days of being logged into KDE.
> > Well, if you were using LVM, this would take less than a minute:
> >
> > lvresize -L +2G /dev/myVolumeGroup/myVarVolume
> > resize2fs /dev/myVolumeGroup/myVarVolume
>
> Yea but I don't use LVM.
I know :)
Wonko
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 63+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-user] Running out of space on /var partition
2011-07-28 1:09 ` Re: [gentoo-user] " Alex Schuster
@ 2011-07-28 1:22 ` Dale
2011-07-28 18:14 ` Alex Schuster
0 siblings, 1 reply; 63+ messages in thread
From: Dale @ 2011-07-28 1:22 UTC (permalink / raw
To: gentoo-user
Alex Schuster wrote:
> Dale writes:
>
>
>> Alex Schuster wrote:
>>
>
>>> I don't use tmpfs any more, as 8G of RAM is barely enough to run KDe
>>> here.
>>>
>> I run KDE here and it uses less than 1Gbs all the time. Most of the
>> time it hovers around 1Gb with a lot of junk open. If your used 8Gbs,
>> you got a lot running or something. o_O
>>
> I'm using 4.5G right now according to free -m (using the -/+ buffers/cache
> entry). 550M for a Windows VM, 355M for Kontact, 350M for my TV-Browser
> application, 200M for Firefox, incredible 165M for a Chromium instance, 155M
> plasma-desktop. Oh, there's an emerge -a command waiting for me to confirm
> it should run, 155M. virtuoso-t neds 150M, the same goes for Amarok, and
> kwin is at 140 now. The rest is mainly more Chromium and Konqueror
> processes, X, akonadi_nepomuk, apache2, kmymoney, the rest is less then 65M
> each.
>
> The system even starts swapping from time to time. 6G was not enough, things
> are much better now that I have 8G. With 4, it became unusable after 1-2
> days of being logged into KDE.
>
>
>>> Well, if you were using LVM, this would take less than a minute:
>>>
>>> lvresize -L +2G /dev/myVolumeGroup/myVarVolume
>>> resize2fs /dev/myVolumeGroup/myVarVolume
>>>
>> Yea but I don't use LVM.
>>
> I know :)
>
> Wonko
>
>
>
Jeez, I thought I used the kitchen sink here at times. The better
question may be, what don't you have running? LOL
Dale
:-) :-)
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 63+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-user] Running out of space on /var partition
2011-07-27 15:35 ` Neil Bothwick
2011-07-27 15:58 ` Dale
@ 2011-07-28 7:05 ` Joost Roeleveld
1 sibling, 0 replies; 63+ messages in thread
From: Joost Roeleveld @ 2011-07-28 7:05 UTC (permalink / raw
To: gentoo-user
On Wednesday 27 July 2011 16:35:13 Neil Bothwick wrote:
> On Wed, 27 Jul 2011 16:52:53 +0200, Alan McKinnon wrote:
> > > I wonder how effective tmpfs is for PORTAGE_TMPDIR as the builds
> > > that need a lot of disk space can often require a fair bit of
> > > memory too, and tmpfs is using it all.
> >
> > In this last week someone reported doing actually measurements and
> > found that using a tmpfs was actually slower.
>
> Yes, but that was Dale and nothing works as it should for him :-O
I did similar tests as well and came to the conclusion that the speed
difference was minimal. Actually favouring the physical drive.
--
Joost
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 63+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-user] Running out of space on /var partition
2011-07-27 23:16 ` Dale
2011-07-27 23:37 ` Alex Schuster
@ 2011-07-28 7:34 ` Neil Bothwick
2011-07-28 12:49 ` Dale
1 sibling, 1 reply; 63+ messages in thread
From: Neil Bothwick @ 2011-07-28 7:34 UTC (permalink / raw
To: gentoo-user
[-- Attachment #1: Type: text/plain, Size: 796 bytes --]
On Wed, 27 Jul 2011 18:16:35 -0500, Dale wrote:
> Speaking of tmpfs, I should have re-emerged OOo on tmpfs. It filled up
> /var and died, just a few minutes before it would have finished. Oh
> well, I'll make /var bigger next time. Maybe a couple more Gbs. I put
> that http-replicator on here when I decided to keep my old rig up to
> date and it just eats up my /var. I guess I could move http* directory
> tho. ^_^
Filling up /var is bad, putting PORTAGE_TMPDIR somewhere less critical is
a good idea. Its own filesystem is best but as you don't use LVM, how
about a directory on that 750GB second drive you have.
Then if you get kernel panics during emerges, you'll know the drive is at
fault :)
--
Neil Bothwick
Beware of cover disks bearing upgrades.
[-- Attachment #2: signature.asc --]
[-- Type: application/pgp-signature, Size: 198 bytes --]
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 63+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-user] Running out of space on /var partition
2011-07-27 21:30 ` Michael Mol
2011-07-27 21:51 ` Dale
@ 2011-07-28 9:46 ` Kfir Lavi
2011-07-28 20:10 ` Dale
2 siblings, 0 replies; 63+ messages in thread
From: Kfir Lavi @ 2011-07-28 9:46 UTC (permalink / raw
To: gentoo-user
[-- Attachment #1: Type: text/plain, Size: 875 bytes --]
On Thu, Jul 28, 2011 at 12:30 AM, Michael Mol <mikemol@gmail.com> wrote:
> On Wed, Jul 27, 2011 at 5:07 PM, Dale <rdalek1967@gmail.com> wrote:
> > Neil Bothwick wrote:
> >>
> >> On Wed, 27 Jul 2011 10:58:28 -0500, Dale wrote:
> >>
> >
> > I have 16Gbs here. It's not like I'm going to run out or anything. I
> can
> > put half on tmpfs and still have 8Gbs left. That is more than enough to
> > compile even OOo with no space problems.
> >
> > Thoughts?
>
> This is Gentoo, where all us users are reputed to spend their days
> passing around benchmarks of "emerge -e world", right?
>
> Try it. :)
>
>
> --
> :wq
>
> I would like to jump and say NO, but looking at myself last night, running
emerge -e world in both of my comps ;-)
I guess I need to play more with my child.
I have 8GB and tempfs on /var/tmp. Libreoffice compiled well, but didn't
check the timings.
Kfir
[-- Attachment #2: Type: text/html, Size: 1426 bytes --]
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 63+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-user] Running out of space on /var partition
2011-07-28 7:34 ` Neil Bothwick
@ 2011-07-28 12:49 ` Dale
0 siblings, 0 replies; 63+ messages in thread
From: Dale @ 2011-07-28 12:49 UTC (permalink / raw
To: gentoo-user
Neil Bothwick wrote:
> On Wed, 27 Jul 2011 18:16:35 -0500, Dale wrote:
>
>
>> Speaking of tmpfs, I should have re-emerged OOo on tmpfs. It filled up
>> /var and died, just a few minutes before it would have finished. Oh
>> well, I'll make /var bigger next time. Maybe a couple more Gbs. I put
>> that http-replicator on here when I decided to keep my old rig up to
>> date and it just eats up my /var. I guess I could move http* directory
>> tho. ^_^
>>
> Filling up /var is bad, putting PORTAGE_TMPDIR somewhere less critical is
> a good idea. Its own filesystem is best but as you don't use LVM, how
> about a directory on that 750GB second drive you have.
>
> Then if you get kernel panics during emerges, you'll know the drive is at
> fault :)
>
>
>
Now that's a thought. Here is the funny thing. I can copy from the
drive just fine. It just doesn't like me writing anything to it. I
just can't figure out why it would cause a kernel panic. It's not like
the OS is on it or anything.
I did take the sides off my rig last night. I reseated all the cables.
I'm going to do some testing here in a bit. I been upgrading to KDE
4.7. Yeppie !!
Dale
:-) :-)
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 63+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-user] Re: Running out of space on /var partition
2011-07-28 0:47 ` [gentoo-user] " walt
@ 2011-07-28 15:26 ` Peter Humphrey
0 siblings, 0 replies; 63+ messages in thread
From: Peter Humphrey @ 2011-07-28 15:26 UTC (permalink / raw
To: gentoo-user
On Thursday 28 July 2011 01:47:12 walt wrote:
> On 07/27/2011 08:01 AM, Michael Mol wrote:
> > If you allow tmpfs to be backed by swap...
>
> Does that require some extra configuration?
Nope. You just define swap and tmpfs in your fstab. Here are my entries:
$ grep swap /etc/fstab
/dev/sda3 none swap sw,pri=10 0 0
/dev/sdb3 none swap sw,pri=10 0 0
/dev/sda7 none swap sw,pri=1 0 0
/dev/sdb7 none swap sw,pri=1 0 0
$ grep tmpfs /etc/fstab
tmpfs /tmp tmpfs noatime,nodev,nosuid,size=8G 0 0
shm /dev/shm tmpfs nodev,nosuid 0 0
I haven't changed anything there since upgrading from 4 to 16GB RAM a few
months ago. Notice that the tmpfs was then bigger than the installed RAM. It
worked just fine.
--
Rgds
Peter Linux Counter number 5290
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 63+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-user] Running out of space on /var partition
2011-07-28 1:22 ` Dale
@ 2011-07-28 18:14 ` Alex Schuster
2011-07-28 18:48 ` Dale
2011-07-28 19:15 ` Peter Humphrey
0 siblings, 2 replies; 63+ messages in thread
From: Alex Schuster @ 2011-07-28 18:14 UTC (permalink / raw
To: gentoo-user
Dale writes:
> Alex Schuster wrote:
> > Dale writes:
> >> Alex Schuster wrote:
> >>> I don't use tmpfs any more, as 8G of RAM is barely enough to run
> >>> KDE here.
> >>
> >> I run KDE here and it uses less than 1Gbs all the time. Most of the
> >> time it hovers around 1Gb with a lot of junk open. If your used
> >> 8Gbs, you got a lot running or something. o_O
> >
> > I'm using 4.5G right now according to free -m (using the -/+
> > buffers/cache entry). 550M for a Windows VM, 355M for Kontact, 350M
> > for my TV-Browser application, 200M for Firefox, incredible 165M for
> > a Chromium instance, 155M plasma-desktop. Oh, there's an emerge -a
> > command waiting for me to confirm it should run, 155M. virtuoso-t
> > neds 150M, the same goes for Amarok, and kwin is at 140 now. The rest
> > is mainly more Chromium and Konqueror processes, X, akonadi_nepomuk,
> > apache2, kmymoney, the rest is less then 65M each.
> >
> > The system even starts swapping from time to time. 6G was not enough,
> > things are much better now that I have 8G. With 4, it became unusable
> > after 1-2 days of being logged into KDE.
> Jeez, I thought I used the kitchen sink here at times. The better
> question may be, what don't you have running? LOL
I made some screenshots [*] after I started with an empty .kde4 directory
one week ago. They show what is started automatically when I log into KDE,
well, except for the last desktop where I fired up a browser for online
banking.
Desktop 1: Administration stuff. A Konsole with a root shell and a normal
shell, and another spare one. Some system info and logging plasmoids.
Desktop 2: Multimedia. Amarok, a folder plasmoid with my images. A Dolphin
with two tabs showing my music and video files, both tabs have two views. A
Konsole window is grouped to the Dolphin window, I use it mainly for
downloading videos with my download script, which is a wrapper for youtube-
dl but does a little more. BTW, I added it to the 'Open with...' menu in
Konqueror, but nowadays I write 'mydl' in this shell and drag the URLs I
want to download from the browser right into the shell.
Desktop 3: Mail/News/WWW. Kontact, I use the KMail, Akregator and KNode
components mainly. And two grouped Chromium windows with some tabs.
Desktop 4: Remote. I go here when I administrate remote systems, via ssh in
a Konsole, RDesktop, or NX. The folder views have shortcuts to start
NX/Rdesktop/VPN sessions, or Dophins opening FTP locations and such.
Desktop 5: Programming. A big Dolphin grouped to a Konsole with a growing
number of tabs. Some folder views for stuff I regularly need. Another
Chromium, showing my Wiki, and more tabs when I need them. When I actually
do something here, I also have some editor windows open.
Desktop 6: Other. Financial stuff, LibreOffice, and other things that don't
fit into the other desktops.
All in all, I don't think this is really so much. With KDE uptime, more
things are running, and I often see no need to close them, because might
need them later again. The weird thing is that this has been my attitude for
long, and before KDE4, I had no problems with this, even with less then 4G
of RAM. I was using swap then, but it did not matter much, a little delay
while an application I did not use for a while gets swapped in was okay. But
now, when swapping starts, it seems to happen constantly. As if important
stuff were swapped out, that would be needed again immediately.
With the ati-drivers, this was even worse. When I moved to radeon, it was
much better already.
Wonko
[*] http://www.wonkology.org/comp/desktop/2011-07-24/
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 63+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-user] Running out of space on /var partition
2011-07-28 18:14 ` Alex Schuster
@ 2011-07-28 18:48 ` Dale
2011-07-28 19:06 ` Alex Schuster
2011-07-28 19:15 ` Peter Humphrey
1 sibling, 1 reply; 63+ messages in thread
From: Dale @ 2011-07-28 18:48 UTC (permalink / raw
To: gentoo-user
Alex Schuster wrote:
>
> I made some screenshots [*] after I started with an empty .kde4 directory
> one week ago. They show what is started automatically when I log into KDE,
> well, except for the last desktop where I fired up a browser for online
> banking.
>
> Desktop 1: Administration stuff. A Konsole with a root shell and a normal
> shell, and another spare one. Some system info and logging plasmoids.
>
> Desktop 2: Multimedia. Amarok, a folder plasmoid with my images. A Dolphin
> with two tabs showing my music and video files, both tabs have two views. A
> Konsole window is grouped to the Dolphin window, I use it mainly for
> downloading videos with my download script, which is a wrapper for youtube-
> dl but does a little more. BTW, I added it to the 'Open with...' menu in
> Konqueror, but nowadays I write 'mydl' in this shell and drag the URLs I
> want to download from the browser right into the shell.
>
> Desktop 3: Mail/News/WWW. Kontact, I use the KMail, Akregator and KNode
> components mainly. And two grouped Chromium windows with some tabs.
>
> Desktop 4: Remote. I go here when I administrate remote systems, via ssh in
> a Konsole, RDesktop, or NX. The folder views have shortcuts to start
> NX/Rdesktop/VPN sessions, or Dophins opening FTP locations and such.
>
> Desktop 5: Programming. A big Dolphin grouped to a Konsole with a growing
> number of tabs. Some folder views for stuff I regularly need. Another
> Chromium, showing my Wiki, and more tabs when I need them. When I actually
> do something here, I also have some editor windows open.
>
> Desktop 6: Other. Financial stuff, LibreOffice, and other things that don't
> fit into the other desktops.
>
> All in all, I don't think this is really so much. With KDE uptime, more
> things are running, and I often see no need to close them, because might
> need them later again. The weird thing is that this has been my attitude for
> long, and before KDE4, I had no problems with this, even with less then 4G
> of RAM. I was using swap then, but it did not matter much, a little delay
> while an application I did not use for a while gets swapped in was okay. But
> now, when swapping starts, it seems to happen constantly. As if important
> stuff were swapped out, that would be needed again immediately.
> With the ati-drivers, this was even worse. When I moved to radeon, it was
> much better already.
>
> Wonko
>
> [*] http://www.wonkology.org/comp/desktop/2011-07-24/
>
>
>
http://www.wonkology.org/comp/desktop/2011-07-24/desktop6.png
You might want to remove that one. Look closely at the bank screen.
I'm looking closely. Some things interest me. I'm still learning about
KDE4. ;-)
Dale
:-) :-)
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 63+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-user] Running out of space on /var partition
2011-07-28 18:48 ` Dale
@ 2011-07-28 19:06 ` Alex Schuster
2011-07-28 19:18 ` Peter Humphrey
2011-07-28 19:38 ` Dale
0 siblings, 2 replies; 63+ messages in thread
From: Alex Schuster @ 2011-07-28 19:06 UTC (permalink / raw
To: gentoo-user
Dale writes:
> Alex Schuster wrote:
> http://www.wonkology.org/comp/desktop/2011-07-24/desktop6.png
>
> You might want to remove that one. Look closely at the bank screen.
That's okay, this is not really my account number, although very close :)
But even if it were, I guess it wouldn't be too much of a security risk.
> I'm looking closely. Some things interest me.#
Which things?
> I'm still learning about KDE4. ;-)
Me too :) If only things were more stable. I'll wait a little and then
upgrade to 4.7, and then I'll decide if I stay with it. If not, the question
would be what to use instead, I would miss so many things. I got KDE-
addicted.
Wonko
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 63+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-user] Running out of space on /var partition
2011-07-28 18:14 ` Alex Schuster
2011-07-28 18:48 ` Dale
@ 2011-07-28 19:15 ` Peter Humphrey
2011-07-28 20:27 ` Alex Schuster
1 sibling, 1 reply; 63+ messages in thread
From: Peter Humphrey @ 2011-07-28 19:15 UTC (permalink / raw
To: gentoo-user
On Thursday 28 July 2011 19:14:07 Alex Schuster wrote:
> Desktop 4: Remote. I go here when I administrate remote systems, via ssh
> in a Konsole, RDesktop, or NX. The folder views have shortcuts to start
> NX/Rdesktop/VPN sessions, or Dophins opening FTP locations and such.
Is that Bow Fell (otherwise known as Bowfell) on the horizon, head in
clouds?
Apart from that, how do you manage with so much clutter? Me, I have one
application per desktop, apart from sysadmin which has three Konsoles. And
definitely no desktop icons.
To each his own, of course. It's interesting to see how the other half live.
--
Rgds
Peter Linux Counter number 5290
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 63+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-user] Running out of space on /var partition
2011-07-28 19:06 ` Alex Schuster
@ 2011-07-28 19:18 ` Peter Humphrey
2011-07-28 19:38 ` Dale
1 sibling, 0 replies; 63+ messages in thread
From: Peter Humphrey @ 2011-07-28 19:18 UTC (permalink / raw
To: gentoo-user
On Thursday 28 July 2011 20:06:09 Alex Schuster wrote:
> I'll wait a little and then upgrade to 4.7, and then I'll decide if I stay
> with it. If not, the question would be what to use instead, I would miss
> so many things.
Me too. I'm sure you wouldn't like gnome: it has far too much of the Windows
arrogance about it (I know what you need better than you do, so just shut up
and stop complaining).
--
Rgds
Peter Linux Counter number 5290
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 63+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-user] Running out of space on /var partition
2011-07-28 19:06 ` Alex Schuster
2011-07-28 19:18 ` Peter Humphrey
@ 2011-07-28 19:38 ` Dale
2011-07-28 20:15 ` Yohan Pereira
2011-07-28 20:50 ` Alex Schuster
1 sibling, 2 replies; 63+ messages in thread
From: Dale @ 2011-07-28 19:38 UTC (permalink / raw
To: gentoo-user
Alex Schuster wrote:
> Dale writes:
>
>
>> Alex Schuster wrote:
>>
>
>> http://www.wonkology.org/comp/desktop/2011-07-24/desktop6.png
>>
>> You might want to remove that one. Look closely at the bank screen.
>>
> That's okay, this is not really my account number, although very close :)
> But even if it were, I guess it wouldn't be too much of a security risk.
>
>
That's good to hear. It looked like you had a pretty short password so
figuring that out wouldn't be to hard I would guess. Glad you changed
things tho. Better to be safe than sorry. :-)
>> I'm looking closely. Some things interest me.#
>>
> Which things?
>
Some of the widget thingys. What's with the big eyeballs anyway?
>
>> I'm still learning about KDE4. ;-)
>>
> Me too :) If only things were more stable. I'll wait a little and then
> upgrade to 4.7, and then I'll decide if I stay with it. If not, the question
> would be what to use instead, I would miss so many things. I got KDE-
> addicted.
>
> Wonko
>
>
I like KDE to. I just don't take much time learning all the stuff like
I should.
For me, desktop 1: Seamonkey browser
desktop 2: Seamonkey email
desktop 3: Konsole with at least two tabs
desktop 5: Konqueror as root
desktop 6: Kpat for my card game.
desktop 7: Konqueror as a user and usually smplayer for watching
videos, music and such.
desktop 8: Usually just gkrellm.
desktop 4, 9 and 10 are generally blank. I use them for whatever I am
into at the time. It may be OOo, gtkam, Gimp or any number of other apps.
MemTotal: 16441056 kB
MemFree: 6356592 kB
Buffers: 847064 kB
Cached: 7243384 kB
According to gkrellm I'm actually using 1.1Gbs at the moment. I got the
local radar thing loaded up and it uses a good bit. We are expecting
some storms here today. Since they are coming from my blind side, I
watch the radar so I don't get wet. lol
How do you tell KDE that you want a widget thingy on one desktop and not
all of them? I figured out how to get one that I saw on your screenshot
but it put it on them all. I only want it on one tho. I can't seem to
find the magic button.
Dale
:-) :-)
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 63+ messages in thread
* [gentoo-user] Re: Running out of space on /var partition
2011-07-28 0:23 ` Dale
@ 2011-07-28 20:00 ` walt
2011-07-28 20:14 ` Dale
0 siblings, 1 reply; 63+ messages in thread
From: walt @ 2011-07-28 20:00 UTC (permalink / raw
To: gentoo-user
On 07/27/2011 05:23 PM, Dale wrote:
> Dale wrote:
> I hit the wrong button. lol
>
> Dale
>
> :-) :-)
Ah, that explains the names 'fireball' and 'smoker'?
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 63+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-user] Running out of space on /var partition
2011-07-27 21:30 ` Michael Mol
2011-07-27 21:51 ` Dale
2011-07-28 9:46 ` Kfir Lavi
@ 2011-07-28 20:10 ` Dale
2011-07-29 1:50 ` Bill Kenworthy
2 siblings, 1 reply; 63+ messages in thread
From: Dale @ 2011-07-28 20:10 UTC (permalink / raw
To: gentoo-user
Michael Mol wrote:
> On Wed, Jul 27, 2011 at 5:07 PM, Dale<rdalek1967@gmail.com> wrote:
>
>> Neil Bothwick wrote:
>>
>>> On Wed, 27 Jul 2011 10:58:28 -0500, Dale wrote:
>>>
>>>
>> I have 16Gbs here. It's not like I'm going to run out or anything. I can
>> put half on tmpfs and still have 8Gbs left. That is more than enough to
>> compile even OOo with no space problems.
>>
>> Thoughts?
>>
> This is Gentoo, where all us users are reputed to spend their days
> passing around benchmarks of "emerge -e world", right?
>
> Try it. :)
>
>
Here you go:
Estimated update time: 16 hours, 15 minutes.
I finally got the error out of the way. Oh,
Packages installed: 1003
Packages in world: 115
Packages in system: 45
Dale
:-) :-)
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 63+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-user] Re: Running out of space on /var partition
2011-07-28 20:00 ` [gentoo-user] " walt
@ 2011-07-28 20:14 ` Dale
2011-07-28 20:34 ` Peter Humphrey
2011-07-28 21:38 ` walt
0 siblings, 2 replies; 63+ messages in thread
From: Dale @ 2011-07-28 20:14 UTC (permalink / raw
To: gentoo-user
walt wrote:
> On 07/27/2011 05:23 PM, Dale wrote:
>
>> Dale wrote:
>>
>
>> I hit the wrong button. lol
>>
>> Dale
>>
>> :-) :-)
>>
> Ah, that explains the names 'fireball' and 'smoker'?
>
>
Smoker is my first machine. It was smokin for its day. Since this
machine is a LOT faster, I had to come up with something good for it
too. Fireball is it. I guess lightening will be next. Maybe it will
be 10 cores at 8Ghz with 128Gbs of ram or some supped up crap like
that. lol
Dale is dreaming big.
Dale
:-) :-)
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 63+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-user] Running out of space on /var partition
2011-07-28 19:38 ` Dale
@ 2011-07-28 20:15 ` Yohan Pereira
2011-07-28 20:50 ` Alex Schuster
1 sibling, 0 replies; 63+ messages in thread
From: Yohan Pereira @ 2011-07-28 20:15 UTC (permalink / raw
To: gentoo-user
[-- Attachment #1: Type: text/plain, Size: 613 bytes --]
On Thursday 28 Jul 2011 14:38:01 Dale wrote:
> How do you tell KDE that you want a widget thingy on one desktop and not all
of them?
Settings -> workspace behavior -> Virtual Desktops -> Tick "diffrent widgets
for each desktop"
in earlier kde versions when they were trying to figure out what to do with
activities you could have an activity bound to each desktop and have the same
effect.
Kinda like where activities are going .. but its rather rough rite now ..
Compiling 4.7 right now lets hope its better off.
--
- Yohan Pereira
"A man can do as he will, but not will as he will" - Schopenhauer
[-- Attachment #2: Type: text/html, Size: 2867 bytes --]
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 63+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-user] Running out of space on /var partition
2011-07-28 19:15 ` Peter Humphrey
@ 2011-07-28 20:27 ` Alex Schuster
2011-07-28 20:41 ` Alan McKinnon
2011-07-28 20:43 ` Peter Humphrey
0 siblings, 2 replies; 63+ messages in thread
From: Alex Schuster @ 2011-07-28 20:27 UTC (permalink / raw
To: gentoo-user
Peter Humphrey writes:
> On Thursday 28 July 2011 19:14:07 Alex Schuster wrote:
>
>> Desktop 4: Remote. I go here when I administrate remote systems, via ssh
>> in a Konsole, RDesktop, or NX. The folder views have shortcuts to start
>> NX/Rdesktop/VPN sessions, or Dophins opening FTP locations and such.
>
> Is that Bow Fell (otherwise known as Bowfell) on the horizon, head in
> clouds?
Probably not. The image file name is citrusdal.jpg, this is the name of
a small town in South Aftica as Wikipedia tells me. It's just one of
dozends images I got from KDE-Look.org, they change every hour. Same for
the 6th desktop, which shows another bunch of images. The others are static.
Not that this is useful in any way, in fact it would be smarter to
choose backgrounds that would not make my semi-transparent Konsoles a
little hard to read, but I wanted a little eye-candy.
> Apart from that, how do you manage with so much clutter? Me, I have one
> application per desktop, apart from sysadmin which has three Konsoles. And
> definitely no desktop icons.
Wow, I would need many more desktops then. How many do you have? So you
also use activities? I don't, and I think they don't suit me as I
already havmy things separated on their desktops, but I do like the idea
and am interested in how this develops.
I like it this way, and cluttering is not a problem for me. Well, maybe
I could put Amarok + my MP3 Dolphin on an exra desktop, leaving more
space for movies and images. But then, when I need the space, I simple
double-click Amarok's title bar which makes it roll up so only the title
bar is visible. And sometimes I maximize Amarok vertically or even to
fullscreen.
> To each his own, of course. It's interesting to see how the other half live.
There are who-has-the-best-KDE-dsktop competitions, and I always wonder
why those people only seem to have a single one, with few applications.
If I was to participate, I would have to compose all my desktops into a
large image, but that would be against the rules.
Wonko
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 63+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-user] Re: Running out of space on /var partition
2011-07-28 20:14 ` Dale
@ 2011-07-28 20:34 ` Peter Humphrey
2011-07-28 20:42 ` Dale
2011-07-28 21:38 ` walt
1 sibling, 1 reply; 63+ messages in thread
From: Peter Humphrey @ 2011-07-28 20:34 UTC (permalink / raw
To: gentoo-user
On Thursday 28 July 2011 21:14:09 Dale wrote:
> I guess lightening will be next.
No, no, no. Lightning, please. Quite a different word (the cause of thunder,
as against a lifting of the ambient light level).
Or maybe that's another "simplification" in the American language. I can't
keep up with the rate of degradation these days.
--
Rgds
Peter Linux Counter 5290, 1994-04-23
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 63+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-user] Running out of space on /var partition
2011-07-28 20:27 ` Alex Schuster
@ 2011-07-28 20:41 ` Alan McKinnon
2011-07-28 20:43 ` Peter Humphrey
1 sibling, 0 replies; 63+ messages in thread
From: Alan McKinnon @ 2011-07-28 20:41 UTC (permalink / raw
To: gentoo-user; +Cc: Alex Schuster
On Thursday, 28 July 2011 22:27:48 Alex Schuster did opine thusly:
> Probably not. The image file name is citrusdal.jpg, this is the name
> of a small town in South Aftica as Wikipedia tells me.
It's a nice town. In season, you can buy the most fantastic oranges
there that you ever tasted.
--
alan dot mckinnon at gmail dot com
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 63+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-user] Re: Running out of space on /var partition
2011-07-28 20:34 ` Peter Humphrey
@ 2011-07-28 20:42 ` Dale
0 siblings, 0 replies; 63+ messages in thread
From: Dale @ 2011-07-28 20:42 UTC (permalink / raw
To: gentoo-user
Peter Humphrey wrote:
> On Thursday 28 July 2011 21:14:09 Dale wrote:
>
>
>> I guess lightening will be next.
>>
> No, no, no. Lightning, please. Quite a different word (the cause of thunder,
> as against a lifting of the ambient light level).
>
> Or maybe that's another "simplification" in the American language. I can't
> keep up with the rate of degradation these days.
>
>
True. My spelling is off today. Well, today too. ;-) That's also
shorter too.
Dale
:-) :-)
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 63+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-user] Running out of space on /var partition
2011-07-28 20:27 ` Alex Schuster
2011-07-28 20:41 ` Alan McKinnon
@ 2011-07-28 20:43 ` Peter Humphrey
1 sibling, 0 replies; 63+ messages in thread
From: Peter Humphrey @ 2011-07-28 20:43 UTC (permalink / raw
To: gentoo-user
On Thursday 28 July 2011 21:27:48 Alex Schuster wrote:
> I would need many more desktops then. How many do you have?
Mostly I have six, but when I'm in a major redevelopment phase of my web
site that goes up to eight.
> So you also use activities? I don't, and I think they don't suit me as I
> already havmy things separated on their desktops, but I do like the idea
> and am interested in how this develops.
No, I don't use activities. If I did, they'd be file management, e-mail, web,
sys-admin, css development, html editing and maybe one or two others.
> I like it this way, and cluttering is not a problem for me.
So I see. As I said, we all have our own methods.
> There are who-has-the-best-KDE-dsktop competitions, and I always wonder
> why those people only seem to have a single one, with few applications.
> If I was to participate, I would have to compose all my desktops into a
> large image, but that would be against the rules.
I think life's too short for that kind of indulgence.
--
Rgds
Peter Linux Counter 5290, 1994-04-23
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 63+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-user] Running out of space on /var partition
2011-07-28 19:38 ` Dale
2011-07-28 20:15 ` Yohan Pereira
@ 2011-07-28 20:50 ` Alex Schuster
2011-07-29 20:37 ` Dale
1 sibling, 1 reply; 63+ messages in thread
From: Alex Schuster @ 2011-07-28 20:50 UTC (permalink / raw
To: gentoo-user
Dale writes:
> Alex Schuster wrote:
>> Dale writes:
>>> Alex Schuster wrote:
>>
>>> http://www.wonkology.org/comp/desktop/2011-07-24/desktop6.png
>>>
>>> You might want to remove that one. Look closely at the bank screen.
>>>
>> That's okay, this is not really my account number, although very close :)
>> But even if it were, I guess it wouldn't be too much of a security risk.
>
> That's good to hear. It looked like you had a pretty short password so
> figuring that out wouldn't be to hard I would guess.
Five characters seems to be normal for online banking here. Anyway,
after three failed attempts, the account is locked. I can unlock it by
giving my PIN and a TAN.
>>> I'm looking closely. Some things interest me.#
>>>
>> Which things?
>
> Some of the widget thingys. What's with the big eyeballs anyway?
They watch :)
No, there's no other purpose. I have at least one instance of XEyes on
my desktop since I found this little application in 1992 when I first
started using a Sun workstation. But it is since some months only that I
had the idea to have multiple ones. Well, that's the nice thing about
plasmids, they stay behind application windows, so the do not get in the
way.
>>> I'm still learning about KDE4. ;-)
>>>
>> Me too :) If only things were more stable. I'll wait a little and then
>> upgrade to 4.7, and then I'll decide if I stay with it. If not, the question
>> would be what to use instead, I would miss so many things. I got KDE-
>> addicted.
> I like KDE to. I just don't take much time learning all the stuff like
> I should.
I learnt a lot on the KDE mailing list (which is also a nice one, with
helpful people). Especially about this Akonadi stuff that the new KDEPIM
is using.
> For me, desktop 1: Seamonkey browser
>
> desktop 2: Seamonkey email
>
> desktop 3: Konsole with at least two tabs
>
> desktop 5: Konqueror as root
Why this?
> desktop 6: Kpat for my card game.
>
> desktop 7: Konqueror as a user and usually smplayer for watching
> videos, music and such.
>
> desktop 8: Usually just gkrellm.
>
> desktop 4, 9 and 10 are generally blank. I use them for whatever I am
> into at the time. It may be OOo, gtkam, Gimp or any number of other apps.
I'm thinking about adding two desktops now.
> MemTotal: 16441056 kB
> MemFree: 6356592 kB
> Buffers: 847064 kB
> Cached: 7243384 kB
>
> According to gkrellm I'm actually using 1.1Gbs at the moment.
It's 3G more here.
> I got the
> local radar thing loaded up and it uses a good bit. We are expecting
> some storms here today. Since they are coming from my blind side, I
> watch the radar so I don't get wet. lol
Is this a plasmoid? This would be a nice one to have.
> How do you tell KDE that you want a widget thingy on one desktop and not
> all of them? I figured out how to get one that I saw on your screenshot
> but it put it on them all. I only want it on one tho. I can't seem to
> find the magic button.
Like Yohan said :)
Though I'd like if plasmoids could also be made sticky, on desktops
and/or activities. Maybe they'll implement this, I think this is on the
list. Or does 4.7 already have this feature?
Wonko
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 63+ messages in thread
* [gentoo-user] Re: Running out of space on /var partition
2011-07-28 20:14 ` Dale
2011-07-28 20:34 ` Peter Humphrey
@ 2011-07-28 21:38 ` walt
2011-07-28 21:50 ` Dale
2011-07-28 22:03 ` Alex Schuster
1 sibling, 2 replies; 63+ messages in thread
From: walt @ 2011-07-28 21:38 UTC (permalink / raw
To: gentoo-user
On 07/28/2011 01:14 PM, Dale wrote:
> walt wrote:
>> On 07/27/2011 05:23 PM, Dale wrote:
>>
>>> Dale wrote:
>>>
>>
>>> I hit the wrong button. lol
>>>
>>> Dale
>>>
>>> :-) :-)
>>>
>> Ah, that explains the names 'fireball' and 'smoker'?
>>
>>
>
> Smoker is my first machine. It was smokin for its day. Since this
> machine is a LOT faster, I had to come up with something good for it
> too. Fireball is it. I guess lightening will be next. Maybe it
> will be 10 cores at 8Ghz with 128Gbs of ram or some supped up crap
> like that. lol
Oops, I got it completely wrong, then. Amongst hardware geeks there is
an old (maybe obsolete?) expression "it's time for the smoke-test!" which
means: plug it in and turn it on -- and then note carefully where the
plume of smoke is coming from :)
You're obviously too young to remember those days....
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 63+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-user] Re: Running out of space on /var partition
2011-07-28 21:38 ` walt
@ 2011-07-28 21:50 ` Dale
2011-07-28 22:03 ` Alex Schuster
1 sibling, 0 replies; 63+ messages in thread
From: Dale @ 2011-07-28 21:50 UTC (permalink / raw
To: gentoo-user
walt wrote:
>
> Oops, I got it completely wrong, then. Amongst hardware geeks there is
> an old (maybe obsolete?) expression "it's time for the smoke-test!" which
> means: plug it in and turn it on -- and then note carefully where the
> plume of smoke is coming from :)
>
> You're obviously too young to remember those days....
>
>
Nope. Not only do I remember them but I have done that many many
times. I used to build pump controllers for my water system here. It
had two pumps and some sensors to keep a tank full. If I had just one
wire out of place, I get to start over. . . . after the stink goes away
of course.
Dale
:-) :-)
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 63+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-user] Re: Running out of space on /var partition
2011-07-28 21:38 ` walt
2011-07-28 21:50 ` Dale
@ 2011-07-28 22:03 ` Alex Schuster
2011-07-28 22:36 ` Paul Hartman
1 sibling, 1 reply; 63+ messages in thread
From: Alex Schuster @ 2011-07-28 22:03 UTC (permalink / raw
To: gentoo-user
walt writes:
> On 07/28/2011 01:14 PM, Dale wrote:
>> walt wrote:
>>> Ah, that explains the names 'fireball' and 'smoker'?
>>
>> Smoker is my first machine. It was smokin for its day. Since this
>> machine is a LOT faster, I had to come up with something good for it
>> too. Fireball is it. I guess lightening will be next. Maybe it
>> will be 10 cores at 8Ghz with 128Gbs of ram or some supped up crap
>> like that. lol
>
> Oops, I got it completely wrong, then. Amongst hardware geeks there is
> an old (maybe obsolete?) expression "it's time for the smoke-test!" which
> means: plug it in and turn it on -- and then note carefully where the
> plume of smoke is coming from :)
I still have my first PC, a 12-MHz 286. The last time I turned it on,
the casing being opened, something exploded and a huge flame burst out
between the card slots. Now THAT was a real smoker!
After the dust had settled, I clipped the capacitor that was burnt.
Turned the thing on, and it was runing just fine. And I could play the
ancient spacewars game once again.
I wouldn't expect today's hardware to survive this.
Wonko
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 63+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-user] Re: Running out of space on /var partition
2011-07-28 22:03 ` Alex Schuster
@ 2011-07-28 22:36 ` Paul Hartman
2011-07-29 8:26 ` Alex Schuster
0 siblings, 1 reply; 63+ messages in thread
From: Paul Hartman @ 2011-07-28 22:36 UTC (permalink / raw
To: gentoo-user
On Thu, Jul 28, 2011 at 5:03 PM, Alex Schuster <wonko@wonkology.org> wrote:
> And I could play the
> ancient spacewars game once again.
Star Control? Wing Commander? hmm :)
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 63+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-user] Running out of space on /var partition
2011-07-28 20:10 ` Dale
@ 2011-07-29 1:50 ` Bill Kenworthy
0 siblings, 0 replies; 63+ messages in thread
From: Bill Kenworthy @ 2011-07-29 1:50 UTC (permalink / raw
To: gentoo-user
On Thu, 2011-07-28 at 15:10 -0500, Dale wrote:
> Michael Mol wrote:
> > On Wed, Jul 27, 2011 at 5:07 PM, Dale<rdalek1967@gmail.com> wrote:
> >
> >> Neil Bothwick wrote:
> >>
> >>> On Wed, 27 Jul 2011 10:58:28 -0500, Dale wrote:
> >>>
> >>>
> >> I have 16Gbs here. It's not like I'm going to run out or anything. I can
> >> put half on tmpfs and still have 8Gbs left. That is more than enough to
> >> compile even OOo with no space problems.
> >>
> >> Thoughts?
> >>
> > This is Gentoo, where all us users are reputed to spend their days
> > passing around benchmarks of "emerge -e world", right?
> >
> > Try it. :)
> >
> >
>
> Here you go:
>
> Estimated update time: 16 hours, 15 minutes.
>
> I finally got the error out of the way. Oh,
>
> Packages installed: 1003
> Packages in world: 115
> Packages in system: 45
>
> Dale
>
> :-) :-)
>
Old sony vaio laptop with a 1.2G p3m with 1G ram - helped on occasion by
ccache and distcc, and occaisionally hindered by compiling over nfs when
I didnt have enough room - they DO work :)
BillK
bunyip ~ # genlop -t libreoffice
* app-office/libreoffice
Thu Jun 23 06:37:55 2011 >>> app-office/libreoffice-3.3.1
merge time: 12 hours, 34 minutes and 37 seconds.
Sun Jun 26 06:46:09 2011 >>> app-office/libreoffice-3.3.1
merge time: 4 hours, 46 minutes and 49 seconds.
Tue Jun 28 20:43:20 2011 >>> app-office/libreoffice-3.3.2
merge time: 8 hours and 22 seconds.
bunyip ~ # genlop -t openoffice
* app-office/openoffice
Thu Dec 23 08:58:37 2004 >>> app-office/openoffice-1.1.3
merge time: 7 hours, 25 minutes and 19 seconds.
Mon Dec 27 12:55:49 2004 >>> app-office/openoffice-1.1.3
merge time: 14 hours, 58 minutes and 35 seconds.
Sun Jan 23 05:08:26 2005 >>> app-office/openoffice-1.1.4
merge time: 11 hours, 29 minutes and 51 seconds.
Sat Apr 16 21:08:20 2005 >>> app-office/openoffice-1.1.4-r1
merge time: 8 hours, 54 minutes and 24 seconds.
Sun Oct 2 18:04:26 2005 >>> app-office/openoffice-1.1.5
merge time: 7 hours, 15 minutes and 14 seconds.
Mon Nov 7 21:51:45 2005 >>> app-office/openoffice-2.0.0
merge time: 14 hours, 2 minutes and 4 seconds.
Sat Nov 26 13:38:30 2005 >>> app-office/openoffice-2.0.0
merge time: 11 hours, 45 minutes and 12 seconds.
Tue Dec 27 14:43:36 2005 >>> app-office/openoffice-2.0.1
merge time: 6 hours, 59 minutes and 52 seconds.
Fri Feb 10 08:50:16 2006 >>> app-office/openoffice-2.0.1
merge time: 14 hours, 54 minutes and 32 seconds.
Sat Mar 18 11:54:54 2006 >>> app-office/openoffice-2.0.2
merge time: 1 day, 4 hours, 16 minutes and 42 seconds.
Sun May 7 06:19:25 2006 >>> app-office/openoffice-2.0.2-r2
merge time: 17 hours, 5 minutes and 20 seconds.
Fri Jul 7 13:02:01 2006 >>> app-office/openoffice-2.0.3
merge time: 18 hours, 41 minutes and 41 seconds.
Sun Jul 30 16:41:13 2006 >>> app-office/openoffice-2.0.3
merge time: 1 day, 3 hours, 5 minutes and 23 seconds.
Sun Nov 12 09:25:03 2006 >>> app-office/openoffice-2.0.4
merge time: 17 hours, 51 minutes and 13 seconds.
Mon Jan 15 18:17:10 2007 >>> app-office/openoffice-2.1.0
merge time: 9 hours, 57 minutes and 12 seconds.
Mon Jan 29 17:16:27 2007 >>> app-office/openoffice-2.1.0
merge time: 7 hours, 9 minutes and 42 seconds.
Thu Feb 8 20:44:18 2007 >>> app-office/openoffice-2.1.0
merge time: 4 hours, 26 minutes and 32 seconds.
Sun Feb 11 07:00:42 2007 >>> app-office/openoffice-2.1.0
merge time: 10 hours, 14 minutes and 2 seconds.
Sat Mar 24 07:46:43 2007 >>> app-office/openoffice-2.1.0-r1
merge time: 9 hours, 16 minutes and 37 seconds.
Sat Apr 21 09:11:55 2007 >>> app-office/openoffice-2.2.0
merge time: 9 hours, 54 minutes and 28 seconds.
Sun Jun 17 13:17:49 2007 >>> app-office/openoffice-2.2.1
merge time: 20 hours, 27 minutes and 20 seconds.
Sun Sep 2 02:57:47 2007 >>> app-office/openoffice-2.2.1
merge time: 15 hours, 18 minutes and 38 seconds.
Sat Sep 22 20:58:39 2007 >>> app-office/openoffice-2.3.0
merge time: 10 hours, 42 minutes and 12 seconds.
Thu Dec 6 13:36:50 2007 >>> app-office/openoffice-2.3.1
merge time: 18 hours, 46 minutes and 21 seconds.
Mon Feb 4 05:24:20 2008 >>> app-office/openoffice-2.3.1-r1
merge time: 7 hours, 43 minutes.
Thu Feb 14 17:43:52 2008 >>> app-office/openoffice-2.3.1-r1
merge time: 15 hours, 19 minutes and 5 seconds.
Tue Apr 8 14:38:39 2008 >>> app-office/openoffice-2.4.0
merge time: 8 hours, 28 minutes and 39 seconds.
Thu Apr 24 14:48:21 2008 >>> app-office/openoffice-2.4.0
merge time: 6 hours, 30 minutes and 17 seconds.
Fri Jun 20 06:55:22 2008 >>> app-office/openoffice-2.4.1
merge time: 7 hours, 51 minutes and 57 seconds.
Thu Sep 11 03:26:56 2008 >>> app-office/openoffice-2.4.1
merge time: 7 hours, 55 minutes and 6 seconds.
Sat Sep 20 09:01:10 2008 >>> app-office/openoffice-2.4.1
merge time: 2 hours, 28 minutes and 55 seconds.
Thu Sep 25 20:27:06 2008 >>> app-office/openoffice-2.4.1
merge time: 2 hours, 39 minutes and 51 seconds.
Wed Nov 5 15:48:46 2008 >>> app-office/openoffice-3.0.0
merge time: 7 hours, 44 minutes and 5 seconds.
Sun Jan 4 18:24:42 2009 >>> app-office/openoffice-3.0.0
merge time: 5 hours, 16 minutes and 25 seconds.
Sun Feb 1 15:32:19 2009 >>> app-office/openoffice-3.0.0
merge time: 5 hours, 6 minutes and 43 seconds.
Sat Feb 14 15:44:14 2009 >>> app-office/openoffice-3.0.1
merge time: 6 hours, 29 minutes and 33 seconds.
Tue Apr 14 00:25:06 2009 >>> app-office/openoffice-3.0.1
merge time: 5 hours, 36 minutes and 34 seconds.
Sun May 31 05:58:17 2009 >>> app-office/openoffice-3.1.0
merge time: 5 hours, 55 minutes and 59 seconds.
Wed Jun 10 01:59:14 2009 >>> app-office/openoffice-3.1.0
merge time: 4 hours, 35 minutes and 44 seconds.
Sat Jul 4 05:45:14 2009 >>> app-office/openoffice-3.1.0
merge time: 6 hours, 17 minutes and 41 seconds.
Tue Jul 28 04:43:29 2009 >>> app-office/openoffice-3.1.0-r1
merge time: 4 hours, 18 minutes and 20 seconds.
Thu Aug 27 03:10:23 2009 >>> app-office/openoffice-3.1.0-r1
merge time: 5 hours, 55 minutes and 20 seconds.
Tue Sep 8 22:53:00 2009 >>> app-office/openoffice-3.1.1
merge time: 5 hours, 12 minutes and 16 seconds.
Tue Dec 1 05:32:15 2009 >>> app-office/openoffice-3.1.1
merge time: 4 hours, 30 minutes and 53 seconds.
Sat Apr 3 17:35:38 2010 >>> app-office/openoffice-3.2.0
merge time: 4 hours, 3 minutes and 56 seconds.
Sun Apr 25 15:49:40 2010 >>> app-office/openoffice-3.2.0
merge time: 3 hours, 56 minutes and 36 seconds.
Thu Jun 10 06:42:41 2010 >>> app-office/openoffice-3.2.0
merge time: 8 hours, 48 minutes and 37 seconds.
Thu Jul 22 15:45:08 2010 >>> app-office/openoffice-3.2.1
merge time: 3 hours, 32 minutes and 17 seconds.
Tue Nov 16 00:12:53 2010 >>> app-office/openoffice-3.2.1
merge time: 17 hours, 41 minutes and 11 seconds.
Tue Dec 14 18:57:17 2010 >>> app-office/openoffice-3.2.1-r1
merge time: 10 hours, 43 minutes and 38 seconds.
bunyip ~ #
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 63+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-user] Re: Running out of space on /var partition
2011-07-28 22:36 ` Paul Hartman
@ 2011-07-29 8:26 ` Alex Schuster
0 siblings, 0 replies; 63+ messages in thread
From: Alex Schuster @ 2011-07-29 8:26 UTC (permalink / raw
To: gentoo-user
Paul Hartman writes:
> On Thu, Jul 28, 2011 at 5:03 PM, Alex Schuster <wonko@wonkology.org>
> wrote:
> > And I could play the ancient spacewars game once again.
>
> Star Control? Wing Commander? hmm :)
No, those came later. It's a clone of the probably very first computer
action game: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Spacewar!
This is the one: http://jeff.rainbow-100.com/?p=93
Wow, it even has a download link. And it sort of runs in dosemu. Although
the CGA version only (640x200), not the one using much nicer Hercules
graphics (720x384), which I still have a copy of anyway. That was why I had
started it on my old AT.
Interestingly, while the nice animation of the SPACEWAR logo is way too fast
to see, the game itself is playable. Not against the robot though, the
wining strategy is to simply wait until it has no energy left due to
excessive hyperjumping (which it normally doesn't do), and finish it with a
single laser beam when it comes nearby.
Wonko
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 63+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-user] Running out of space on /var partition
2011-07-28 20:50 ` Alex Schuster
@ 2011-07-29 20:37 ` Dale
0 siblings, 0 replies; 63+ messages in thread
From: Dale @ 2011-07-29 20:37 UTC (permalink / raw
To: gentoo-user
Alex Schuster wrote:
> Dale writes:
>
>
>
>> Some of the widget thingys. What's with the big eyeballs anyway?
>>
> They watch :)
> No, there's no other purpose. I have at least one instance of XEyes on
> my desktop since I found this little application in 1992 when I first
> started using a Sun workstation. But it is since some months only that I
> had the idea to have multiple ones. Well, that's the nice thing about
> plasmids, they stay behind application windows, so the do not get in the
> way.
>
>
I gave the little worm looking thing a try once. I wasn't much on the
eyes thing. I guess I don't like someone looking over my shoulder and
watching me. lol
>
>> I like KDE to. I just don't take much time learning all the stuff like
>> I should.
>>
> I learnt a lot on the KDE mailing list (which is also a nice one, with
> helpful people). Especially about this Akonadi stuff that the new KDEPIM
> is using.
>
>
I subscribe there too. I just get to a point where things work and I
tend to leave well enough alone. :/
>> For me, desktop 1: Seamonkey browser
>>
>> desktop 2: Seamonkey email
>>
>> desktop 3: Konsole with at least two tabs
>>
>> desktop 5: Konqueror as root
>>
> Why this?
>
>
I use Konqueror for all sorts of things. I mostly use it to edit config
files or something like that. I don't like Dolphin to much. It's OK
but just not for me. Maybe one day.
>
>> I got the
>> local radar thing loaded up and it uses a good bit. We are expecting
>> some storms here today. Since they are coming from my blind side, I
>> watch the radar so I don't get wet. lol
>>
> Is this a plasmoid? This would be a nice one to have.
>
>
It runs on a tab on Seamonkey. It my local radar from weather.gov.
>> How do you tell KDE that you want a widget thingy on one desktop and not
>> all of them? I figured out how to get one that I saw on your screenshot
>> but it put it on them all. I only want it on one tho. I can't seem to
>> find the magic button.
>>
> Like Yohan said :)
>
> Though I'd like if plasmoids could also be made sticky, on desktops
> and/or activities. Maybe they'll implement this, I think this is on the
> list. Or does 4.7 already have this feature?
>
> Wonko
>
>
I tried that but it messed up my slideshow background. I guess I would
have to set it up for each desktop. I'll just keep using Gkrellm I
guess. It works pretty well.
I have not tried the activities thing yet. I don't really know much
about it. I need to find a howto on KDE that is up to date.
Dale
:-) :-)
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 63+ messages in thread
end of thread, other threads:[~2011-07-29 20:38 UTC | newest]
Thread overview: 63+ messages (download: mbox.gz follow: Atom feed
-- links below jump to the message on this page --
2011-07-25 10:02 [gentoo-user] Running out of space on /var partition Mick
2011-07-25 10:24 ` YoYo Siska
2011-07-25 10:40 ` Mick
2011-07-25 11:18 ` YoYo Siska
2011-07-25 11:39 ` Mick
2011-07-25 11:03 ` Kfir Lavi
2011-07-25 12:15 ` Alan McKinnon
2011-07-27 7:24 ` Alexander Puchmayr
2011-07-27 13:23 ` Mick
2011-07-27 13:29 ` Michael Mol
2011-07-27 13:41 ` Peter Humphrey
2011-07-27 13:55 ` Michael Mol
2011-07-27 14:40 ` Neil Bothwick
2011-07-27 14:52 ` Dale
2011-07-27 14:52 ` Alan McKinnon
2011-07-27 15:03 ` Michael Mol
2011-07-27 15:35 ` Neil Bothwick
2011-07-27 15:58 ` Dale
2011-07-27 20:44 ` Neil Bothwick
2011-07-27 20:54 ` Michael Mol
2011-07-27 22:35 ` Neil Bothwick
2011-07-27 21:07 ` Dale
2011-07-27 21:30 ` Michael Mol
2011-07-27 21:51 ` Dale
2011-07-27 22:14 ` Joshua Murphy
2011-07-27 22:28 ` Dale
2011-07-28 9:46 ` Kfir Lavi
2011-07-28 20:10 ` Dale
2011-07-29 1:50 ` Bill Kenworthy
2011-07-27 22:37 ` Neil Bothwick
2011-07-27 23:16 ` Dale
2011-07-27 23:37 ` Alex Schuster
2011-07-28 0:19 ` Dale
2011-07-28 0:23 ` Dale
2011-07-28 20:00 ` [gentoo-user] " walt
2011-07-28 20:14 ` Dale
2011-07-28 20:34 ` Peter Humphrey
2011-07-28 20:42 ` Dale
2011-07-28 21:38 ` walt
2011-07-28 21:50 ` Dale
2011-07-28 22:03 ` Alex Schuster
2011-07-28 22:36 ` Paul Hartman
2011-07-29 8:26 ` Alex Schuster
2011-07-28 1:09 ` Re: [gentoo-user] " Alex Schuster
2011-07-28 1:22 ` Dale
2011-07-28 18:14 ` Alex Schuster
2011-07-28 18:48 ` Dale
2011-07-28 19:06 ` Alex Schuster
2011-07-28 19:18 ` Peter Humphrey
2011-07-28 19:38 ` Dale
2011-07-28 20:15 ` Yohan Pereira
2011-07-28 20:50 ` Alex Schuster
2011-07-29 20:37 ` Dale
2011-07-28 19:15 ` Peter Humphrey
2011-07-28 20:27 ` Alex Schuster
2011-07-28 20:41 ` Alan McKinnon
2011-07-28 20:43 ` Peter Humphrey
2011-07-28 7:34 ` Neil Bothwick
2011-07-28 12:49 ` Dale
2011-07-28 7:05 ` Joost Roeleveld
2011-07-27 15:01 ` Michael Mol
2011-07-28 0:47 ` [gentoo-user] " walt
2011-07-28 15:26 ` Peter Humphrey
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