Open GoogleCodeExporter opened 9 years ago
The code has always been designed with this in mind, but in the end I decided
that this feature would add
unnecessary complexity for very little actual gain. The cases where this is
useful are very few, and only give a
very small increase in speed. Mis-using the feature loses a whole lot of speed,
and just results in confusion for
users.
Original comment by paracel...@gmail.com
on 19 Jul 2009 at 3:45
I guess. Its certainly your decision as the developer. And I do understand it
can be
an easily abused option. But almost no extraction is multithreaded, leaving only
multiple extractions as a way to maximize hardware / extraction times.
For instance, the unrar code (including RARLabs own C++ code even compiled with
Intel
Compiler) at maximum extracts at 15-20 MB/s on an 8-core Xeon with 8GB of
memory.
Even laptop disks can sustain 80MB/s on a sequential write. I can unrar 4
archives at
once before I start seeing a degradation in performance. My most common setup
looks
like this
Linux Box (8-core xeon with single 7k SATA disk) over a gigabit network to a
Macbook
Pro 17" with 7.2k harddisk. I can sustain 50MB/s easy with 3 archives using the
command unrar tool.
Again, I not trying to force or heavily suggest you to do anything you don't
want to
do. I've always liked the idea of a replacement for the built-in Mac OS X
extractor
tool with more power-user-like options, and I think theunarchiver is really it,
so I
just want to provide helpful, useful feedback. :-)
Original comment by joe.roback@gmail.com
on 19 Jul 2009 at 4:02
Generally if you run extractions directly on local disks, the problem with
running multiple ones is that seeking
overhead will kill your throughput. Of course, if the extraction process is
particularly slow, you can still afford
that, but in the end it all turns into a big mess trying to figure out when an
archive can safely be started in
parallel.
Like said, It's something I've kept in mind but never figured out how to do
right. I think I'll leave the issue open
for future versions, though, in case a good behaviour can be worked out at some
point.
Original comment by paracel...@gmail.com
on 19 Jul 2009 at 12:51
Original comment by paracel...@gmail.com
on 20 Jul 2009 at 4:25
you know, if implemented, user can receive a warning if they enable more than 1
or 2
extractions at once, stating they should know what they are doing and that it
may
hurt extraction performance.
This kind of power-option you will never see in Mac's built-in extractor. I am
probably only one of very few extracting more than one archive at a time from
separate sources, so I understand the low/maybe priority. I'll have to stick to
command extraction for now.
Original comment by joe.roback@gmail.com
on 22 Jul 2009 at 12:08
Original comment by paracel...@gmail.com
on 16 Sep 2012 at 7:18
Original issue reported on code.google.com by
joe.roback@gmail.com
on 19 Jul 2009 at 3:20