Date: Tue, 04 Mar 2008 12:27:08 -0500 From: Joe Marcus Clarke <marcus@freebsd.org> To: Alexander Leidinger <Alexander@Leidinger.net> Cc: freebsd-gnome@freebsd.org Subject: Re: Evolution crawls on FreeBSD Message-ID: <47CD866C.8020909@freebsd.org> In-Reply-To: <20080304104855.8dk4kbnbac4g4kc4@webmail.leidinger.net> References: <20080301181608.5d393e02.ejcerejo@optonline.net> <1204424514.1262.36.camel@shumai.marcuscom.com> <20080303001237.28a45ba9.jylefort@brutele.be> <200803040842.47946.roy@marples.name> <20080304104855.8dk4kbnbac4g4kc4@webmail.leidinger.net>
next in thread | previous in thread | raw e-mail | index | archive | help
Alexander Leidinger wrote: > Quoting Roy Marles <roy@marples.name> (from Tue, 4 Mar 2008 08:42:47 > +0000): > >> On Sunday 02 March 2008 23:12:37 Jean-Yves Lefort wrote: >>> Indeed, a casual inspection of libexec/rtdl-elf/rtld.c shows that the >>> SO_NEEDED lists (Obj_Entry.needed) are walked recursively. Removing >>> the useless entries might therefore have a dramatic impact on >>> performance. >> >> One thing that may help here is allowing the use of cutsom LDFLAGS - >> namely -Wl,--as-needed. This removes SO_NEEDED references when the >> library >> really isn't needed. For a more indepth discussion on the benefits of >> this, > > This sounds really interesting! We would have to check which compiler > versions understand this flag. And it is a nin-intrusive change to the > autotools chain. And making ports honor LDFLAGS (like they do with > CFLAGS) is a good ideas IMO. > >> read this article [1]. I had a quick look at ports, but it doesn't >> seem to >> honor LDFLAGS in any port. Sadly most of the world needs to be >> compiled with >> this LDFLAG for it to really work, so I didn't look much futher. >> FreeBSD base >> system compiles fine with it though :) > > Oh, if the gnome maintained ports would honor LDFLAGS, it would already > be a big deal (and probably solve the issue with evolution). All GNOME ports honor LDFLAGS. We pass custom LDFLAGS via CONFIGURE_ENV to every port (i.e. to add -L${LOCALBASE}/lib). This would be trivial to test. As for the linker patch, I see the same slowish startup on 7.X and 8.X, so I do not think it will help. That said, if you are using the FBSD linker in G/FBSD, and you're not seeing this problem, there must be something else that's keep Evo in the linker for so long. Thus far, I haven't heard any default Gentoo option that may account for this. Perhaps you have some other libtool patches or other custom patches not in any version of FBSD...? Joe > > Thanks for info, > Alexander. > -- Joe Marcus Clarke FreeBSD GNOME Team :: gnome@FreeBSD.org FreeNode / #freebsd-gnome http://www.FreeBSD.org/gnome
Want to link to this message? Use this URL: <https://mail-archive.FreeBSD.org/cgi/mid.cgi?47CD866C.8020909>