On Fri, 2009-02-20 at 19:32 -0500, Bill Davidsen wrote: > Valent Turkovic wrote: > > On Tue, Feb 17, 2009 at 8:19 PM, Valent Turkovic > > <valent.turkovic@xxxxxxxxx> wrote: > >> http://rudd-o.com/en/linux-and-free-software/tales-from-responsivenessland-why-linux-feels-slow-and-how-to-fix-that > >> > >> What is you comment? > >> > >> -- > >> http://kernelreloaded.blog385.com/ > >> linux, blog, anime, spirituality, windsurf, wireless > >> registered as user #367004 with the Linux Counter, http://counter.li.org. > >> ICQ: 2125241, Skype: valent.turkovic > >> > > > > As a long time Linux desktop user and Linux enthusiast I want bloody > > screaming fast desktop :) There are some situations that I just want > > to pull my hair out when I see that desktop performance just crawls to > > a halt :( > > > > When I read articles like Tales from responsivenessland[1] I really > > don't get why there aren't bells ringing in the heads of the people > > who can actually make a difference for Linux desktop performance. > > > > I was also really sad when I read interview with Con Kolivas[2] and > > the reasons why he quit kernel development[3]. > > > I've known Kon for years, sent him patches for his 2.4 based "ck" kernel > patches. But if you didn't read the LKML before he left, and can't follow the > code, you see his point of view without context. > > > I hope kernel developers will wake up and realise that there are also > > us - Desktop users and what we need and want are responsive desktops. > > > > Will Fedora be the first Linux distro to have sane desktop defaults > > (vm.swappiness=1 and vm.vfs_cache_pressure=50). Current Fedora slogan > > is "Features. Freedom. Friends. First", I hope to see "Desktop > > performance" as part of it soon ;) > > > I read that [3] article and the first two things I noticed were the reference to > "small RAM" which in the days of $11/GB RAM is rare, and that the author didn't > touch the "dirty" tuning parameters, which are better suited to controlling the > behavior of i/o buffers. He didn't mention tuning read ahead to speed reading of > application off the disk (which limits response even if lots of memory is > free). In short the article is based on one trick, not a balanced approach to > getting both responsive performance and good i/o performance. > > I regularly handle images 4x the size of memory, and in 33 days uptime have > written a total of 109MB (from iostat) to swap. A balanced tune is far nicer > than cranking swappiness as low as it will go and keeping crap in memory which > is not needed (left over initialization code, error messages you never see, etc). > > > [1] http://rudd-o.com/en/linux-and-free-software/tales-from-responsivenessland-why-linux-feels-slow-and-how-to-fix-that > > [2] http://apcmag.com/interview_with_con_kolivas_part_1_computing_is_boring.htm > > [3] http://apcmag.com/why_i_quit_kernel_developer_con_kolivas.htm > > Try getting rid of the bloat of some of the new desktop systems- kde4 is a real resource hog. I can't stop it from stealing my speed unless I kill the binaries in memory. And gnome is not that much better. If you want real speed customise and maintain xdm and the smaller desktops like xfce and fvwm. -- fedora-list mailing list fedora-list@xxxxxxxxxx To unsubscribe: https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/fedora-list Guidelines: http://fedoraproject.org/wiki/Communicate/MailingListGuidelines