From: sthen Date: Thu, 16 May 2024 10:31:55 +0000 (+0000) Subject: 40GB WRKOBJDIR is too tight if you end up with two chromium-based ports X-Git-Url: http://artulab.com/gitweb/?a=commitdiff_plain;h=32dd5bcdfc1d4c0428eeb32743d05ae67909cb8c;p=openbsd 40GB WRKOBJDIR is too tight if you end up with two chromium-based ports built on the same machine, suggest 50 min on archs with chromium and that 100 wouldn't be unreasonable --- diff --git a/share/man/man8/bulk.8 b/share/man/man8/bulk.8 index 35f8d969a5f..a9cba53b57b 100644 --- a/share/man/man8/bulk.8 +++ b/share/man/man8/bulk.8 @@ -1,4 +1,4 @@ -.\" $OpenBSD: bulk.8,v 1.9 2024/05/16 10:14:22 tb Exp $ +.\" $OpenBSD: bulk.8,v 1.10 2024/05/16 10:31:55 sthen Exp $ .\" .\" Copyright (c) 2016 Marc Espie .\" @@ -59,11 +59,14 @@ for instance .Pp Reserve one "scratch" partition under the chroot for WRKOBJDIR (for instance, mfs, async, or SSD). -This partition should be roughly 40GB if you want to be able to -build all ports using multiple CPU cores. This can often double as .Pa /tmp under the chroot. +The largest ports can take in excess of 20GB each (more for a debug +build) and you may have several of these built at the same time. +50GB is probably a reasonable minimum on an architecture which can build +chromium, though 100GB would not be overkill, especially if you have +many cores. .Pp Alternately, you can setup your whole chroot as a scratch partition, and reserve one more permanent space under it for distfiles,