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Top Forums Web Development Some Typical Discourse Docker (Standalone) Rebuild, Restore and Update Times Post 303045708 by Neo on Friday 10th of April 2020 12:40:31 AM
Old 04-10-2020
Some Typical Discourse Docker (Standalone) Rebuild, Restore and Update Times

Just some notes on some typical tasks for Discourse and how long they take:

Restore Postgres DB (Linux Ubuntu, 8 Core 32 GB RAM)

Code:
# time ./restoreneo     // simple script that does a command line restore
cd /var/www/discourse
discourse enable_restore
Restore are now permitted. Disable them with `disable_restore`
begin neo restore
....
...
....

Marking restore as finished...
Notifying 'system' of the end of the restore...
Finished!
[SUCCESS]
Restore done.
discourse disable_restore
Restore are now forbidden. Enable them with `enable_restore`

real	9m58.273s
user	2m20.157s
sys	1m26.850s
root@community-app:/shared/neo/bin#

Rebuild Discourse Docker standalone app which is already installed (MacOS MacPro (Last 2013) 12-Core, 64GB RAM)

Code:
# ./launcher rebuild app

WARNING: We are about to start downloading the Discourse base image
This process may take anywhere between a few minutes to an hour, depending on your network speed

Please be patient

...
...
...

real	7m18.784s
user	0m1.694s
sys	0m1.116s
#

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TIMES(2)						     Linux Programmer's Manual							  TIMES(2)

NAME
times - get process times SYNOPSIS
#include <sys/times.h> clock_t times(struct tms *buf); DESCRIPTION
The times() function stores the current process times in the struct tms that buf points to. The struct tms is as defined in <sys/times.h>: struct tms { clock_t tms_utime; /* user time */ clock_t tms_stime; /* system time */ clock_t tms_cutime; /* user time of children */ clock_t tms_cstime; /* system time of children */ }; The tms_utime field contains the CPU time spent executing instructions of the calling process. The tms_stime field contains the CPU time spent in the system while executing tasks on behalf of the calling process. The tms_cutime field contains the sum of the tms_utime and tms_cutime values for all waited-for terminated children. The tms_cstime field contains the sum of the tms_stime and tms_cstime values for all waited-for terminated children. Times for terminated children (and their descendants) is added in at the moment wait(2) or waitpid(2) returns their process ID. In particu- lar, times of grandchildren that the children did not wait for are never seen. All times reported are in clock ticks. RETURN VALUE
The function times returns the number of clock ticks that have elapsed since an arbitrary point in the past. For Linux this point is the moment the system was booted. This return value may overflow the possible range of type clock_t. On error, (clock_t) -1 is returned, and errno is set appropriately. NOTES
The number of clock ticks per second can be obtained using sysconf(_SC_CLK_TCK); In POSIX-1996 the symbol CLK_TCK (defined in <time.h>) is mentioned as obsolescent. It is obsolete now. On Linux, if the disposition of SIGCHLD is set to SIG_IGN then the times of terminated children are automatically included in the tms_cstime and tms_cutime fields, although POSIX 1003.1-2001 says that this should only happen if the calling process wait()s on its chil- dren. Note that clock(3) returns values of type clock_t that are not measured in clock ticks but in CLOCKS_PER_SEC. CONFORMING TO
SVr4, SVID, POSIX, X/OPEN, BSD 4.3 HISTORICAL NOTES
SVr1-3 returns long and the struct members are of type time_t although they store clock ticks, not seconds since the epoch. V7 used long for the struct members, because it had no type time_t yet. On older systems the number of clock ticks per second is given by the variable HZ. SEE ALSO
time(1), getrusage(2), wait(2), clock(3), sysconf(3) Linux 2002-06-14 TIMES(2)
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