NetBSD-Users archive

[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index][Old Index]

Re: Checking out src with Mercurial



On 2020-06-19 23:09, matthew sporleder wrote:


On Jun 19, 2020, at 3:51 PM, Johnny Billquist <bqt%update.uu.se@localhost> wrote:

On 2020-06-19 20:19, matthew sporleder wrote:
git clone with --depth 1, over http (instead of ssh), and with a few
simple settings changes will make it work inside of 128M.

Well, the whole point of virtual memory and demand paging is that you don't have to have enough physical memory. I would hope that still applies... My comment about have 128M (which, by the way, can be considered a lot, when we talk about VAXen), was just about the potential speed I possibly could expect. If git really requires that people have at least 128M of physical memory to work, then I'd first ask when did NetBSD break so badly that the amount of physical memory becomes a limitation in this way, and second, why would a tool like this require that much memory in the first place?

  Johnny

--
Johnny Billquist                  || "I'm on a bus
                                  ||  on a psychedelic trip
email: bqt%softjar.se@localhost             ||  Reading murder books
pdp is alive!                     ||  tryin' to stay hip" - B. Idol


I don’t know what to tell you.  It works.

Cool. In which case your previous comment about various tricks needed to "will make it work inside of 128M" is actually a rather misleading comment?

I personally think running such an old and inefficient computer is, literally, immoral when a modern $30 machine can emulate it perfectly using as much electricity as a small CFL light bulb and leave over 700mb of memory to spare.

To each his own.

  Johnny

--
Johnny Billquist                  || "I'm on a bus
                                  ||  on a psychedelic trip
email: bqt%softjar.se@localhost             ||  Reading murder books
pdp is alive!                     ||  tryin' to stay hip" - B. Idol


Home | Main Index | Thread Index | Old Index