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Re: Slow performance on linux - workaround
From: |
Evan Thomas |
Subject: |
Re: Slow performance on linux - workaround |
Date: |
Thu, 30 May 1996 09:13:12 +1000 |
Jim Van Zandt wrote:
>
> Maybe the Sun had enough memory that the relevant disk sectors
> (directory entries for the function files) were all in buffers, so no
> actual disk access was needed.
>
> You could try freeing up memory by getting rid of X windows and other
> terminal sessions, and ensuring there's plenty of swap space (so
> little-used code can be swapped out), and simplifying the search path.
>
> Alternatively, you could try filling up the memory on the Sun to see
> whether the performance problem appears there. You could write a
> trivial program that mallocs a block of memory then waits for a
> specified time or a keypress. I suppose you would have to fill up
> swap space before it would have any impact.
>
> - Jim Van Zandt
This almost certainly isn't the problem. The Sun is running X, acting as Web
server, doing file and e-mail serving, etc. The Linux box is just running octave
over an rlogin session - nothing else (normal it runs that other operating
system, I just get to use it occassionally). Both machines have 32Mb of memory
and neither appear to be doing significat IO (ie paging) when octave is running.
I tried setting the LOADPATH to the current directory only (LOADPATH=".") but it
didn't fix it. (My functions are in the current directory, anyway, which is the
first in the search path.)
Evan.
--
Evan Thomas
Department of Anatomy & Cell Biology
University of Melbourne
Parkville, 3052
ph: 9344-5849 fax: 9347-5219