Cygwin Perl has slowed in recent months
Csaba Raduly
rcsaba@gmail.com
Tue May 24 08:25:43 GMT 2022
On Mon, 23 May 2022 at 20:47, Lee wrote:
>
> On 5/22/22, David Christensen <dpchrist@holgerdanske.com> wrote:
> > On 5/21/22 10:55, Hans-Bernhard Bröker wrote:
> >> Am 18.05.2022 um 03:53 schrieb David Christensen:
> >>
> >> > I am working on a Perl module that runs on various Unix-like platforms.
> >> > When I 'make test' on similar computers:
> >> >
> >> > FreeBSD 12.3-RELEASE 28 wallclock secs
> >> > Debian GNU/Linux 11.3 31 wallclock secs
> >> > macOS 11.6.2 36 wallclock secs
> >> > Windows 7 / Cygwin 3.3.5-1 509 wallclock secs
> >>
> >> Given the complete lack of information about what that Perl module of
> >> yours might be doing, that's hard to have a meaningful discussion about.
> >
> >
> > Thank you for the response. I was hoping there was a known issue.
> > Apparently, not.
>
> What I consider a well known issue is that process start up time is
> _very_ slow. If your 'make test' starts lots of processes that could
> be a problem.
>
While Cygwin''s fork emulation is indeed slow (I once measured 1000:1
between Cygwin and Linux * ),
"make test" likely started roughly the same number of processes "then"
as it does "now".
In which case the increase in the run time could be attributed to Cygwin.
* "The marvel is not that the bear dances well, but that the bear
dances at all" - Russian proverb
--
You can get very substantial performance improvements
by not doing the right thing. - Scott Meyers, An Effective C++11/14 Sampler
So if you're looking for a completely portable, 100% standards-conformant way
to get the wrong information: this is what you want. - Scott Meyers (C++TDaWYK)
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