[<prev] [next>] [<thread-prev] [thread-next>] [day] [month] [year] [list]
Message-ID: <CAK7LNARQ3nUcqRR2g+xwPpsSrOcNNz-YLH66ZSYnAsrXkUJLEg@mail.gmail.com>
Date: Thu, 19 Oct 2017 01:49:09 +0900
From: Masahiro Yamada <yamada.masahiro@...ionext.com>
To: Douglas Anderson <dianders@...omium.org>
Cc: Guenter Roeck <groeck@...omium.org>,
Simon Glass <sjg@...omium.org>,
Brian Norris <briannorris@...omium.org>,
Ingo Molnar <mingo@...nel.org>,
Matthias Kaehlcke <mka@...omium.org>,
Marcin Nowakowski <marcin.nowakowski@...tec.com>,
Cao jin <caoj.fnst@...fujitsu.com>,
Arnd Bergmann <arnd@...db.de>,
Mark Charlebois <charlebm@...il.com>,
Kees Cook <keescook@...omium.org>,
Linux Kbuild mailing list <linux-kbuild@...r.kernel.org>,
Linux Kernel Mailing List <linux-kernel@...r.kernel.org>,
Michal Marek <michal.lkml@...kovi.net>,
Josh Poimboeuf <jpoimboe@...hat.com>
Subject: Re: [PATCH v4 0/2] kbuild: Cache exploratory calls to the compiler
2017-10-17 2:12 GMT+09:00 Douglas Anderson <dianders@...omium.org>:
> This two-patch series attempts to speed incremental builds of the
> kernel up by a bit. How much of a speedup you get depends a lot on
> your environment, specifically the speed of your workstation and how
> fast it takes to invoke the compiler.
>
> In the Chrome OS build environment you get a really big win. For an
> incremental build (via emerge) I measured a speedup from ~1 minute to
> ~35 seconds. ...but Chrome OS calls the compiler through a number of
> wrapper scripts and also calls the kernel make at least twice for an
> emerge (during compile stage and install stage), so it's a bit of a
> worst case.
>
> Perhaps a more realistic measure of the speedup others might see is
> running "time make help > /dev/null" outside of the Chrome OS build
> environment on my system. When I do this I see that it took more than
> 1.0 seconds before and less than 0.2 seconds after. So presumably
> this has the ability to shave ~0.8 seconds off an incremental build
> for most folks out there. While 0.8 seconds savings isn't huge, it
> does make incremental builds feel a lot snappier.
>
> Ingo Molnar also did some testing of this in his environment and found
> that an incremental build of his subsystem sped up from ~.44 seconds
> before to ~.15 seconds after. Clean builds also sped up by a marginal
> amount. :)
>
> Changes in v4:
> - Add a mkdir
> - Point to forward declaration commit by git hash
>
> Changes in v3:
> - Rule to prevent make from trying to generate the cache
> - Rule to clean .cache.mk
> - No more doc changes
> - Moved cache stuff below cc-cross-prefix
> - Removed duplicate documentation of try-run (oops)
> - Add Tested-by for Ingo and Guenter since v2 and v3 are very similar
>
> Changes in v2:
> - Abstract at a different level (like shell-cached) per Masahiro Yamada
> - Include ld-version, which I missed the first time
>
> Douglas Anderson (2):
> kbuild: Add a cache for generated variables
> kbuild: Cache a few more calls to the compiler
>
> Makefile | 5 +--
> scripts/Kbuild.include | 90 ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++--------
> 2 files changed, 79 insertions(+), 16 deletions(-)
>
Applied to linux-kbuild/kbuild. Thanks.
--
Best Regards
Masahiro Yamada
Powered by blists - more mailing lists