Has having try servers run on demand, say in Amazon EC2, been discussed in the past? Seems like it might make sense. We'd be able to have as many try servers as we need (especially important when there is a lot of load, like before a code freeze - but also in general, to reduce wait times). And we'd be able to not run any try servers when we don't need them.
I guess it can't handle all cases - EC2 can't run all OSes, and the machines are servers, so no normal screen rendering, etc. Also their hardware and performance might not be standardized enough for performance results to be informative. But certainly for building and for a lot of the tests (xpcshell, etc.), it seems like it could speed development up. Maybe building could be sent to EC2 servers on demand, and the results sent back to normal servers for the tests?
Alon Zakai aka kripken | Compiling to the Web: Emscripten, Binaryen, asm.js, WebAssembly, etc. New posts at: https://kripken.github.io/blog/
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Tuesday, August 3, 2010
Monday, August 2, 2010
Power Update
An update on power-related stuff:
- Patch to remove the 1/sec JavaScript timer should be pushed soon. This is one of the biggest sources of wakeups, and can drain your battery over time, so fixing this is very cool.
- Patch to fix unnecessary image animation timers awaiting review. On certain websites, this can leave many, many useless timers, so on those websites this is even more important than the previous point.
- Still working on patch for grouping timers - rewrote it with a new and better approach, works well locally but seeing some odd oranges on try server, not sure if random or not. Once this works, it will reduce the # of wakeups due to animations, probably by something like 10-20%
- Patch with a nice scriptable API for freezing/throttling the content process waiting for feedback. Two main uses:
- Freezing the content process when the OS tells us to. Still working out what the various OSes want us to do and when, see wiki page here.
- Throttling websites that use too much power. As a first iteration of this idea, I was thinking about an addon that has a blacklist of websites that are known CPU hogs, and how much to throttle them.
- Not strictly a power-related issue, but preloading the browser with SIG_STOP/CONT is also being worked on. What is really nice is this lets the browser be started almost instantly from the user's perspective, while being frozen until that time prevents it from using any power before that. Still need to work out the details of this though.