Re: armv7 target (on aarch64 HW) and poudriere-based emulators/mame link failure vs. success based on the number of cores
- Reply: Mark Millard via freebsd-ports : "Re: armv7 target (on aarch64 HW) and poudriere-based emulators/mame link failure vs. success based on the number of cores"
- In reply to: Mark Millard via freebsd-ports : "Re: armv7 target (on aarch64 HW) and poudriere-based emulators/mame link failure vs. success based on the number of cores"
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Date: Tue, 21 Sep 2021 00:47:03 UTC
On 2021-Sep-20, at 15:10, Mark Millard <marklmi at yahoo.com> wrote: > On 2021-Sep-20, at 13:58, Mark Millard <marklmi at yahoo.com> wrote: > >> >> On 2021-Sep-20, at 12:54, Lucas Nali de Magalhães <rollingbits@gmail.com> wrote: >> >>> On Sep 19, 2021, at 6:14 AM, Mark Millard via freebsd-toolchain <freebsd-toolchain@freebsd.org> wrote:(…) >>> >>> (…) >>> >>> The HoneyComb failure looks to me like like hitting the process >>> size limitations for armv7, something that did not happen on the >>> MACCHIATObin Double Shot or RPi4B (fewer cores). >>> >>> It looks to me like 32-bit architectures (such as armv7) should >>> possibly have the multi-threaded link disabled by default >>> for FreeBSD unless ports are adjusted to disable multi-threaded >>> individually. >>> >>> (…) >> >> There are a few a few problems with your analysis: 32 and 64 bit >> architectures sizes aren't that small and much of all OSes today >> evolved around extending these sizes. This doesn't means that one >> can not use all of it but that the analysis requires a little more "salt". >> So it looks like you used all of something… maybe you need to adjust >> some numbers somewhere. >> >> Then, processes and threads existed far before the existence of >> multicore desktop CPUs. Running with more threads/processes than >> the number of cores you have only means that some swapping *may be* >> necessary. If you have enough RAM, swap isn't really necessary. So I think >> this makes your suggestion ridiculous. >> > > > Sorry: a stray click lead to an accidental send of a reply with > no additional content. > > > The above did not indicate any specific errors for me to > fix, experiments to try, or even any specific alternate hypothesis > for the inability to allocate in the failing context that I > described. So I've no clue of a good way to make any progress from > what is written. I see no reason to withdraw the suggestion based > on the above. I'm well aware that there are tradeoffs and that > the suggestion might not be used even if I've gotten everything > correct about the failure's cause. > > > After the HoneyComb system is done with the bulk -a activity > targeting aarch64, I'l likely try bulk -w targeting armv7 in hopes > of getting a .core for the failure. That will be days away and the > rebuild attempt for emulators/mame will have to rebuild the > prerequisite ports (the armv7 packages were deleted before starting > the aarch64 targeting builk -a). So even more time. [I discovered that the aarch64 targeting bulk -a would not sucessfully build something I wanted in the bulk -a activity. So I stopped that build and will restart at some point after updating /usr/ports/ to a version that should build that port.] Well, my attempt to build llvm12 with debug info, when targeting armv7, did not go well. The intent was so that a backtrace of its linker would be useful to me. So this type of experiment proved not useful. > I'd consider other evidence gathering alternatives that might > better indicate specifically why the allocation fails in the > failing context. But the large nubmer of build steps prior to > the failing link and such probably limit the options. === Mark Millard marklmi at yahoo.com ( dsl-only.net went away in early 2018-Mar)