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author | Dirk Olmes <dirk.olmes@codedo.de> |
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date | Fri, 18 Jun 2021 07:24:40 +0200 |
parents | 1d9382b0329b |
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Title: speeding up portage's metadata cache Date: 2015-02-26 Lang: en Tags: Gentoo [Gentoo's](http://www.gentoo.org) portage keeps metadata about installed ebuilds in `/var/cache/edb`. Dependency info for all installed ebuilds is in a `dep` subdirectory which typically looks something like this: :::shell . ├── usr │ └── portage │ ├── app-admin │ │ ├── eselect-1.4.1 │ │ ├── eselect-lib-bin-symlink-0.1.1 │ │ ├── eselect-opengl-1.2.7 │ │ ├── gamin-0.1.10-r1 │ │ ├── logrotate-3.8.7 │ │ └── perl-cleaner-2.16 ... When portage needs to process dependency info, it reads those files. On a normal system, you will have a couple of hundred packages installed. This means that dependency processing does quite a bit of file processing. Now if that dependency info was stored in some kind of database, wouldn't that speed up dependency processing? I stumbled over [a wiki page](http://gentoo-en.vfose.ru/wiki/Portage_SQLite_Cache) describing how to switch portage's metadata cache to sqlite. Even the portage man page talks about this - try running `man portage` and read the section about the `modules` file. So I gave the sqlite metadata cache a try to measure if it really speeds up portage. After configuring the database and rebuilding the metadata cache, `/var/cache/edb/dep` looks a bit different now: :::shell . └── usr ├── portage └── portage.sqlite Now let's get to the interesting part: does the database really speed up portage? To measure, I ran a couple of `emerge -vp` commands using the normal setup and again using the database. The results are quite disappointing, though: The best improvement was about 6% with the metadata database. 57% of the ebuilds did run slower with the metadata database, the worst increase was about 43% So it looks like fiddling with portage's metadata cache is not really worth the hassle.