On Thu, Jan 15, 2009 at 10:50 AM, Jeff Mahoney <jeffm@suse.com> wrote:
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Matt Sealey wrote: What I am interested in are performance numbers. Can you show me how much memory a system booted into the initrd uses? Can you show me how fast it got there? I'd like numbers for both cpio.gz and squashfs. Using the same data set.
I'm working on running this experiment now and doing benchmarking of the two methods. I need to build a kernel with the timing enabled, rebuild my initrd as squashfs, recompress it (had to install the 3.4 tools first! :) and then find a way to do something other than watch it boot. I'm fairly confident it is better, but we will see. Unfortunately due to a hickup (using rpmbuild instead of build) and an errant typo in an RPM spec I deleted some portions of my /usr/lib directory last night, so the next step before actually doing the test, is to get a working system installed that actually compiles again and/or can get into a desktop :D BTW your new kernel-source and kernel-default.spec seems to work okay to a degree.. I'll be using these, would that be an unfair test or do you want me to use the original? :) -- Matt Sealey <matt@genesi-usa.com> Genesi, Manager, Developer Relations -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: opensuse-kernel+unsubscribe@opensuse.org For additional commands, e-mail: opensuse-kernel+help@opensuse.org