On Tue, 23 Jan 2024 14:21:32 +0100, Vegard Nossum wrote: > On 23/01/2024 13:30, Jani Nikula wrote: >> On the other hand, if you're using a virtual environment, what's the >> point in holding back to a version as old as 2.4.4? You might just as >> well go for latest, specifying only the top level dependencies, > > Performance... Specifying exact package requirements like 2.4.4 is > useful since 2.4.4 is by far the fastest Sphinx version that builds our > documentation correctly (AFAICT) and build speed matters a lot when the > difference is 10 minutes vs 30 minutes. > I've never observed such a huge difference, probably because I almost always do clean build of the document, i.e., run "make cleandocs" before running "make htmldocs". So I assumed the performance regression Vegard are emphasizing should be in incremental builds. Here are some of the results comparing v2.4.5, v4.3.2 (of ubuntu jammy), and v7.2.6. (v2.4.5 needs "make -j2 htmldocs" to avoid OOM.) Incremental builds are done after moving from v6.7 to v6.8-rc1. VM spec used: memory: 8GB, threads: 4, ubuntu jammy data in each cell: elapsed time, max resident memory v2.4.5 v4.3.2 v7.2.6 ============================= ============ ============ ============ clean build at v6.7 10m08s 3.3GB 10m31s 1.1GB 10m14s 1.2GB incremental build at v6.8-rc1 11m22s 3.3GB 18m55s 1.2GB 19m50s 1.4GB clean build at v6.8-rc1 10m45s 3.2GB 10m32s 1.2GB 10m13s 1.3GB empty make at v6.8-rc1 3.3s 6.6s 7.0s ============================= ============ ============ ============ I took only one sample for each run, so these numbers should not be taken as representative, but they can still show tendencies. This means the slowness in incremental build is not improved in v7.2.6, which contradicts what Vegard said earlier in this thread. I think incremental build is what Jon uses in his merging. So I'm afraid the performance regression might be troublesome in Jon's workflow. HTH, Akira