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For a (maybe) better desktop performance. Are there any pre-compiled packages anywhere? I would be interested particularly in the "linux-ck-p4" package or else in the general "linux-ck" package. Repository "repo-ck" ( http://repo-ck.com ) has only support for architecture x86_64... Should I install from the AUR by compiling the whole? Could take long time on old 32 bit machines.
Last edited by anselm (2019-02-13 03:13:03)
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I see two possibilities there:
Either compile the packages you need yourself from aur (preferably with devtools32 from [releng] on mirror.archlinux32.org) or ask the maintainers of linux-ck if they are willing to provide i686 packages, too.
regards,
deep42thought
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I thought maybe somebody compiled it for himself, and can provide the .pkg.tar.xz file.
About how many time would it take to compile that package? Few hours or a whole day?
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In my experince, allocate a few hours to compile a kernel. It depends largely on the hardware you're running it on, of course, and the danger when talking about i686 binaries you're using a seriously old computer, but it would have to be really pretty ancient to take a whole day. I suspect most things built using make are io-limited most of the time anyway, so the more important thing is probably how fast your discs are.
Architecture: pentium4, Testing repos: Yes, Hardware: EeePC 901+2GB RAM+OS half on the SD card.
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If you don't need CPU optimization for your CPU architecture the linux-zen which is similar to linux-ck is available in the repo.
Last edited by eugen-b (2019-06-18 22:32:10)
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