If you are looking for a specific 64-bit package and you can't find it in any of the 64-bit repos, please post a request for it here
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rych
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Post#1
by rych » 24 Aug 2022, 09:33
There is no package for it in Slackware
it seems, and so
Code: Select all
pmod -s kdiskmark
getmod -s kdiskmark
surely don't find it either. We can just use the AppImage from
https://github.com/JonMagon/KDiskMark/releases, but it's 27MB instead of a 100KB native module missing some dependencies. Using the KDiskMark as an example i'm interested in a general method to make an xzm module when there is none in any Slackware repository. Thanks
rych
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beny
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Post#2
by beny » 24 Aug 2022, 12:19
Kdiskmark need libnfs and fio but work only in a plasma environment,if you have a gtk system you can imagine the deps that you have to install...let me know if you want the packages
beny
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ncmprhnsbl
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Post#3
by ncmprhnsbl » 24 Aug 2022, 12:44
beny wrote: ↑24 Aug 2022, 12:19
but work only in a plasma environment
looking at the github page, the kde part(kauth) is optional...
Forum Rules : https://forum.porteus.org/viewtopic.php?f=35&t=44
ncmprhnsbl
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rych
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Post#4
by rych » 24 Aug 2022, 17:59
beny, I'm on OpenBox. AppImage works fine. If making a native xzm is too difficult, then let's not do it. Just advise me please: how do you check the speed of your disks, maybe a CLI script and no need for a GUI?
rych
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Rava
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Post#5
by Rava » 30 Aug 2022, 13:53
rych wrote: ↑24 Aug 2022, 17:59
how do you check the speed of your disks, maybe a CLI script and no need for a GUI?
Try looking e.g. on stackoverflow, there are scripts that create random files (either many small ones or few large ones or a mix of small, medium and large ones) and copy or move these around.
But since my machine and my few disks not get quicker when I test their speed I cannot help you with any such scripts since I not use any myself.
Cheers!
Yours Rava
Rava