]> git.ipfire.org Git - thirdparty/openembedded/openembedded-core-contrib.git/commit
package_rpm: restrict rpm to 4 threads
authorAlexander Kanavin <alex@linutronix.de>
Wed, 20 Nov 2024 15:32:05 +0000 (16:32 +0100)
committerRichard Purdie <richard.purdie@linuxfoundation.org>
Thu, 21 Nov 2024 12:14:20 +0000 (12:14 +0000)
commit286d456e71ee2730c197ce394d6be2c7eeced18d
treec5833e0dd02936b96e1a57d804401eb9dcfc7da0
parentf1c7d76361425c85d68ad1f61be1e7ff05df4bab
package_rpm: restrict rpm to 4 threads

TL;DR version:

with this, and the previous compression level changes
I am seeing drastic speedups in package_write_rpm completion times:

webkitgtk goes from 78 seconds to 37 seconds
glibc-locale goes from 399 seconds to 58 seconds (!)

The long version:

rpm uses multithreading for two purposes:

- spawning compressors (which are nowadays themselves
multi-threaded, so the feature is not as useful as it once
was)
- parallel file classification

While the former behaves well on massively parallel CPUs
(it was written and verified here :), the latter was then added
by upstream and only benchmarked on their very old, slow laptop,
apparently:
https://github.com/rpm-software-management/rpm/commit/41f0e214f2266f02d6185ba11f797716de8125d4

On anything more capable it starts showing pathologic behavior,
presumably from spawning massive amount of very short-lived threads,
and then having to synchronize them. For example classifying glibc-locale
takes
5m20s with 256 threads (default on my machine!)
1m49s with 64 threads
59s with 16 threads
48s with 8 threads

Even a more typical recipe like webkitgtk is affected:
47s with 256 threads
32s with 64 threads
27s with 16 or 8 threads

I have found that the optimal amount is actually four: this also
means that only four compressors are running at a time, but
as they're themselves using threads, and typical recipes are dominated
by just two or three large packages, this does not affect overall
completion time.

Signed-off-by: Alexander Kanavin <alex@linutronix.de>
Signed-off-by: Richard Purdie <richard.purdie@linuxfoundation.org>
meta/classes-global/package_rpm.bbclass