Reply
Thread Tools
Posts: 204 | Thanked: 423 times | Joined on Jan 2011
#301
Seriously guys? On Maemo with its constant swapping you are worrying about damaging flash with shell history? Really?
 

The Following 2 Users Say Thank You to hxka For This Useful Post:
Posts: 2,290 | Thanked: 4,133 times | Joined on Apr 2010 @ UK
#302
Originally Posted by hxka View Post
Seriously guys? On Maemo with its constant swapping you are worrying about damaging flash with shell history? Really?
Most "power" users run at least one swap on SD.
I also wish to reduce flash wear as best as I can, not promote it.
__________________

Wiki Admin
sixwheeledbeast's wiki
Testing Squad Subscriber
- mcallerx - tenminutecore - FlopSwap - Qnotted - zzztop - Bander - Fight2048 -


Before posting or starting a thread please try this.
 

The Following 2 Users Say Thank You to sixwheeledbeast For This Useful Post:
Posts: 2,225 | Thanked: 3,822 times | Joined on Jun 2010 @ Florida
#303
Originally Posted by iDont View Post
Split the larger and less frequently used -power features from busybox-power into a separate binary, thus reducing bb-power's /bin/busybox size. Since BusyBox' applets are accessed via symlinks, this split won't be visible to end users. This, combined with extensive regression testing, would make busybox-power eligible for inclusion in the CSSU.
But if you put that new split-off binary with the '-power' features into /opt/.../whatever, while it might not cause problems for users using relative stock devices, it causes problems for any busybox-power user that uses busybox-power features at early-boot stages, such as my /sbin/preinit shell prompt thing - I see later down in the log this got brought up, and I even got mentioned by name, so I see my main concern isn't likely to be a problem with this setup, but then, if we're okay with 100/150kB size increase, saying we're not okay with 500kB is pretty arbitrary - especially when other rootfs-located files are larger by orders of magnitude and some of those can be safely optified on the vast majority of devices. (Edit: and by this I mean most likely all devices, I just can't bring myself to speak in absolutes unless I am damn certain there aren't exceptions, on principle.)

I do appreciate the fact that everyone in that log, in their own way, is trying to make sure users are happy. But at the same time, after reading the log I still see very little merit to the arguments presented against inclusion of busybox power as-is (maybe it's because I actually pay attention to what unoptified packages cram my rootfs after install, and go through the trouble of optifying the biggest offenders? I actually have shell scripts saved for optifying GCC, G++, libc-dev, Ruby, PHP, so I don't have to manually do it every time an N900 requires reflashing....). The whole thing seemingly boils down to "it got compiled in with new features, so the 500kB of extra size is bad" - but if that same 500kB of extra space came from upstream bugfixes and code improvements only, I somehow don't think anyone would be arguing against it as much - mainly because CSSU has happily updated other system packages in a way that by now has probably netted far more rootfs consumption than busybox-power could.

If we want to optimize things to conserve rootfs space, there's plenty of libraries in rootfs, and more-over other standard linux/unix directories that currently map to rootfs that other packages tend to install things into, that don't really need to be in rootfs, and could safely be moved and symlinked over by CSSU, that are vastly less likely to be desirable in a rootfs-mounted-only state, than busybox-power commands. Even things like httpd in busybox-power are likely to be more useful to someone than, say, having the microb-engine or the nokia-maps files in rootfs, because how likely are you to be browsing the internetz with microb or using maps when only rootfs is mounted? And these are optifications known to be completely harmless since the N900 was fairly new - and who's impact on performance is negligible. (And just optifying either of those by default leaves far more free space in rootfs than 500kb extra of busybox-power does.) If either of these optifications have been made standard in CSSU installs and I haven't noticed, I apologize for missing it, but I don't think they have? (And if they have, then we're already far into net gain for rootfs space, even with busybox-power.)

I also somehow I don't think if, for example, mohammadAG (who if I recall correctly helped get the CSSU organized to the point of finally being released initially) had decided to upgrade the busybox package with the features of current busybox-power, any one of the CSSU maintainers would have blinked at just making it the default busybox or even thought too hard about allowing user choice to preserve that 500kB.

(As I said in my prev. post though, I think user choice is wonderful, but I think the greatest advantage to the greatest amount of users, with the least choices forced upon the user, is in this case to make the standard CSSU busybox, busybox-power, and a less feature-filled busybox for space-conservation can be limited to those who really want the rootfs space. Failing that, I am undecided as to whether separate packages are really worse than one that splits the -power features into opt, since two packages might inconvenience some users minutely, but one package will greatly inconvenience a small amount of users. Yes, I might only care for a few specific tools that -power brings, for /sbin/preinit - but we sure can't use me as the standard for what -power features ought to stay in rootfs, because I am hardly the epitome of shell-scripting skill.)

Meh. Worse case scenario, some users be where we are now anyway (having to manually redo things with busybox after every official update) while most others are hopefully happy or at least happier, with the new predicament.

- Edit 2 -
Yes I know I forgot to really address the whole issue of thorough testing being needed before CSSU inclusion of busybox upstream fixes, let alone busybox-power, that's mainly because I am tired, although in short I consider countless users booting without noticed problems countless times to be a very good test - it's not a rigorous test, but to reject it as being insufficient until enough manpower/hours is spent on complete code coverage of initscripts or whatever the proper terminology is simply 'perfect solution fallacy'. And as an aside I feel like that's a pragmatic issue which is to be considered only after the more principle-relevant issue of whether or not (and how) busybox-power or some subset thereof ought to be included into cssu.

Last edited by Mentalist Traceur; 2012-09-22 at 07:17.
 

The Following 13 Users Say Thank You to Mentalist Traceur For This Useful Post:
peterleinchen's Avatar
Posts: 4,118 | Thanked: 8,901 times | Joined on Aug 2010 @ Ruhrgebiet, Germany
#304
Thanks Mentalist, that is exactly my thinking.
So just want to second to your argumentation.
 

The Following 3 Users Say Thank You to peterleinchen For This Useful Post:
Posts: 1,163 | Thanked: 1,873 times | Joined on Feb 2011 @ The Netherlands
#305
+1 one to that. Glad to have you back, I am a bit jalous how well you can elaborate and support your reasonable opinion (and the opinion of others, incl me). Thanks!
__________________
N900 loaded with:
CSSU-T (Thumb)
720p recording,
Pierogi, Lanterne, Cooktimer, Frogatto
N9 16GB loaded with:
Kernel-Plus
--
[TCPdump & libpcap | ngrep]
--
donate
 

The Following 3 Users Say Thank You to mr_pingu For This Useful Post:
Estel's Avatar
Posts: 5,028 | Thanked: 8,613 times | Joined on Mar 2011
#306
I'm absolutely glad, that so many respectable users opt for busybox-power in CSSU. hoever, I would suggest pasting those posts to CSSU-testing thread - I got sneaky suspicions, that CSSU maintainers doesn't have habit of reading this thread. Really!
__________________
N900's aluminum backcover / body replacement
-
N900's HDMI-Out
-
Camera cover MOD
-
Measure battery's real capacity on-device
-
TrueCrypt 7.1 | ereswap | bnf
-
Hardware's mods research is costly. To support my work, please consider donating. Thank You!

Last edited by Estel; 2012-09-22 at 20:35.
 
electroaudio's Avatar
Posts: 381 | Thanked: 336 times | Joined on Jan 2011 @ Stockholm, Sweden
#307
The biggest reason to include power in cssu is that programs that are dependant on power can be easily distibuted to everyone thru the repositories, and for scriptdevelopers, no need to worry about if a command is a powercommand or not...
The same with discussions in the forums, no need to worry about powercommands when helping someone.
The whole function of powerbusybox is to add functionality and useroptions that are vastly more powerful than portraitmode.
-So, if it is important to save space, then remove portrait support and let that portrait busybox be distributed in the repositories, since that doesnt matter where it is distributed.

Edit:
CSSU should focus on internal stuff inside the system, add functionality that other programs can rely on, and that developers and other people can safely assume that they are there for everyone.

And not as it is now to add bells n whistles that can be distributed elswhere without any difference.
Powerbusybox adds functionality that can be used by other programs, while portraitmode and other themes, only wastes some space and processingpower on a *theme* without any added functionality at all to the system itself.
-Just let those who wants portraitmode to install it themselves, and dont distribute it thru cssu, since it doesnt belong there at all.
__________________
Deskypplet , a desktop for N900 *RIP*

Last edited by electroaudio; 2012-09-23 at 10:45.
 
joerg_rw's Avatar
Posts: 2,222 | Thanked: 12,651 times | Joined on Mar 2010 @ SOL 3
#308
Originally Posted by electroaudio View Post
The biggest reason to include power in cssu is that programs that are dependant on power can be easily distibuted to everyone thru the repositories, and for scriptdevelopers, no need to worry about if a command is a powercommand or not...
The same with discussions in the forums, no need to worry about powercommands when helping someone.
The whole function of powerbusybox is to add functionality and useroptions that are vastly more powerful than portraitmode.
-So, if it is important to save space, then remove portrait support and let that portrait busybox be distributed in the repositories, since that doesnt matter where it is distributed.

Edit:
CSSU should focus on internal stuff inside the system, add functionality that other programs can rely on, and that developers and other people can safely assume that they are there for everyone.

And not as it is now to add bells n whistles that can be distributed elswhere without any difference.
Powerbusybox adds functionality that can be used by other programs, while portraitmode and other themes, only wastes some space and processingpower on a *theme* without any added functionality at all to the system itself.
-Just let those who wants portraitmode to install it themselves, and dont distribute it thru cssu, since it doesnt belong there at all.
Thanks for the pretty good explanation on why bbp is not any helpful in rootfs and mandatory CSSU.
a) if your package really *needs* bbp commands in early boot where /opt isn't yet available, you have a problem anyway and should consider how to solve it locally in your pkg
b) if packages generally want to use bbp commands, they can DEPEND on bbp and use proper FQN to the binary, to invoke those commands.
c) IF we'd provide bbp to 'everyone', where would all those packages live that actually exploit those extended functions? In extras? In extras-devel? In CSSU-testing, as optional packages? There's no way a package in extras(-*) repo could DEPEND on CSSU stuff.

As a general rule, CSSU isn't inclined to sacrifice backward compatibility to stock maemo, for convenience of lazy (script-)coders

/j

ps: portrait support in bb-basic is a 2char patch that adds ZERO in bytesize to what bb binary will use - pretty easy both to verify patch sanity as well as considering storage space requirements in rootfs.
__________________
Maemo Community Council member [2012-10, 2013-05, 2013-11, 2014-06 terms]
Hildon Foundation Council inaugural member.
MCe.V. foundation member

EX Hildon Foundation approved
Maemo Administration Coordinator (stepped down due to bullying 2014-04-05)
aka "techstaff" - the guys who keep your infra running - Devotion to Duty http://xkcd.com/705/

IRC(freenode): DocScrutinizer*
First USB hostmode fanatic, father of H-E-N

Last edited by joerg_rw; 2012-10-07 at 15:04.
 
Estel's Avatar
Posts: 5,028 | Thanked: 8,613 times | Joined on Mar 2011
#309
But why to talk about it again? It's already clear, that busybox-power will be in CSSU, if iDont will waste commit time to separate it into two packages. I though, that opinion of both busybox-power author, and CSSU maintainers, is already 100% clear, and advocates from outside CSSU "team" - like me or joerg - have nothing to do anymore, in this case?
---

Going back on topic - iDont, have I missed something, or Your latest update haven't made it into cssu-thumb, and thumb equivalent is one version into the past? Is it just forgotten, delayed, or I just got confused?

/Estel
__________________
N900's aluminum backcover / body replacement
-
N900's HDMI-Out
-
Camera cover MOD
-
Measure battery's real capacity on-device
-
TrueCrypt 7.1 | ereswap | bnf
-
Hardware's mods research is costly. To support my work, please consider donating. Thank You!

Last edited by Estel; 2012-10-09 at 14:53.
 

The Following 2 Users Say Thank You to Estel For This Useful Post:
Posts: 268 | Thanked: 1,053 times | Joined on May 2010 @ The Netherlands
#310
Originally Posted by Estel View Post
Going back on topic - iDont, have I missed something, or Your latest update haven't made it into cssu-thumb, and thumb equivalent is one version into the past? Is it just forgotten, delayed, or I just got confused?
I figured I would push a new version of busybox-power pretty quickly after the last (intermediate) version, hence I skipped sending the sources to freemangordon for inclusion in community-thumb. However, I was wrong, evidently.

Since it looks like it can take a little while longer to get a response over at BusyBox' bugzilla (re the terminating signal handler), I'll probably just go ahead and include my patch in busybox-power and keep that build in extras-devel until I've got some upstream response. I'll make sure freemangordon received the appropriate sources for the new build as well.

Originally Posted by Estel View Post
But why to talk about it again? It's already clear, that busybox-power will be in CSSU, if iDont will [strike]waste[/b] commit time to separate it into two packages. I though, that opinion of both busybox-power author, and CSSU maintainers, is already 100% clear, and advocates from outside CSSU "team" - like me or joerg - have nothing to do anymore, in this case?
Thanks for this. There's not much more to be said with regards to busybox-power & CSSU (it's up to me now), so I'd prefer to let the subject rest as well for now.

Last edited by iDont; 2012-10-08 at 16:40.
 

The Following 4 Users Say Thank You to iDont For This Useful Post:
Reply


 
Forum Jump


All times are GMT. The time now is 11:30.