On Sun, Dec 14, 2014 at 07:52:11AM -0700, Ian Lepore wrote: > On Sun, 2014-12-14 at 10:32 +0000, Poul-Henning Kamp wrote: > > The rotating swirlie ('-/|\') in the loader accounts for a surprisingly > > large part of our boot time on systems with slow-ish serial consoles. > > > > I think right now it takes a step for each 512 byte read, reducing that > > to once every 64kB or even 1MB would be an improvement with the kind of > > kernel sizes we have today. > > > > I experimented with that a while ago using the attached patch and was > disappointed with the results. As I vaguely remember it, a divisor of 8 > looked fine, but had no significant speedup. With a divisor of 32 the > difference was measureable (only like 1.5 seconds or so faster), but it > gave the impression that something was wrong, and the overall perception > was that it was slower rather than faster, despite what a stopwatch > said. > > I was testing at 115kbps, maybe at 9600 it would be significant. I > don't understand why anything these days is still defaulting to 9600. > It's the 21st century, but we never got the George Jetson flying cars we > were promised, and apparently we're never going to break loose from the > standards set by accoustic-coupled modems. You not always working with self-owned servers. Default is 9600,8n1Received on Sun Dec 14 2014 - 18:20:46 UTC
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