Is there any way to force make -j to not over consume my RAM? I work on a dev team, and we have different hardware sets, so -j8 may not be optimal for everyone. However, make -j uses too much RAM for me, and spills over into swap, which can take down my entire system. How can I avoid this?
The somewhat simple solution would be for each workstation to have an environment variable that is suited to what that hardware can handle. Have the makefile read this environment variable and pass it to the -j option. How to get gnu make to read env variables.
Also, if the build process has man...
> When the system is heavily loaded, you will probably want to run fewer jobs than when it is lightly loaded. You can use the ‘-l’ option to tell make to limit the number of jobs to run at once, based on the load average. The ‘-l’ or ‘--max-load’ option is followed by a floating-point number. For example,
-l 2.5 will not let make start more than one job if the load average is above 2.5. The ‘-l’ option with no following number removes the load limit, if one was given with a previous ‘-l’ option.
In UNIX computing, the system load is a measure of the amount of computational work that a computer system performs. The load average represents the average system load over a period of time. It conventionally appears in the form of three numbers which represent the system load during the last one-, five-, and fifteen-minute periods.
Unix-style load calculation
All Unix and Unix-like systems generate a metric of three "load average" numbers in the kernel. Users can easily query the current result from a Unix shell by running the uptime command:
$ uptime
14:34:03 up 10:43, 4 use...
Check it out: load is not really cpu usage. It is a combination of a lot of things. You want to use as much RAM as possible (that's what it's for) without swapping, because then life sucks. Load is the thing that will most effectively do what he wants. It will skyrocket when RAM is exhausted. A sensible limit will do exactly what he wants.
@keith.layne However the load will only go up a lot if IO is highly CPU intensive, which is not always the case. Think of expensive hardware RAID cards.
GAH!
Where is everybody?
But I think a combination of your answer and mine is the way to go.
@keith.layne Load will go up when swapping of course. But that is going to be a function of how expensive disk IO is for the CPU. Some servers have very good disk drive controllers that greatly reduce the amount of CPU load when doing a lot of disk IO
I actually think my answer could potentially be more flexible.. I like the idea of having a separate daemon running that monitors load/RAM usage and modifies the env variable..., But that's just me..
@JimNorton You know, I have no experience with a setup like that, so I think that's why it doesn't sink in. I do however think that the system load may be the most effective metric for controlling make, because you probably won't see that in a dev setup. But I'm speculating.
If you're running a build server, that sounds good. I just think it's a little overly complex for building on your local machine.
@keith.layne Oh I think you find some good information about make. It could work well. But if the concern is largely RAM usage, it's not clear how RAM usage affects load.
@Drise This chat alternate periods when is full of assholes, and periods when you are lucky and can found people like Jim (and the other guys that helped me this afternoon) that are available to help. You'd consider to put a flag on the chat with "Available" or "Asshole time"...
I'm starting the process of learning C++ and object oriented design. What are the known / common techniques for converting procedural code to object-oriented code? What design choices make sense for the following code?
typedef struct
{
int sector;
int sectorPos;
}EndPosition;
typedef st...
I had my own ideas before posting the question. But I really don't want to just create classes for the sake of doing so. I really want to know how to create a proper OO design.
@Ell Well, I'm not always productive, some days more than others. I always get my work done on time though.
For me productivity goes hand in hand with my level of creativity.
I'm not sure about programmers salaries - I wouldn't do something I didn't enjoy but if I have multiple options I would take the one that let's me be more comfortable. and I guess there are experts/novices in every field so its all about experience and skill