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GOPreload Readme


Description:
	Got tired of the way the kernel decides what to keep cached and what
	not, especially after watching a DVD or copying large files,
	I decided to write two simple scripts which keep the applications
	I use most in the system cache by mmapping and mlocking them in memory.


Requirements:
	fmlock (sourcecode included thanks to datenwolf)
	strace
	readlink
	basename
	dirname

Installation:
	* Put everything under /
	* You may want to edit /etc/gopreload.conf
	  to customize gopreload to your needs.
	* systemd users:
		systemctl daemon-reload
		systemctl enable gopreload
	* To give regular users the ability to choose new programs
	  to preload, give them write access to:
		/usr/share/gopreload/enabled and
		/usr/share/gopreload/disabled
		
Usage and example:
	First of all, you must think on a few applications which you REALLY
	need to be very responsive on starting.
	Take firefox as an example:

	--
	I will use then 'Prepare.sh' that way:
	/usr/share/gopreload/bin/Prepare.sh firefox
	(wait for Firefox to fully load and press ENTER in the shell)

	Now Prepare.sh has created a new file called firefox.YourUID.openfiles.txt
	in the /usr/share/gopreload/enabled/ folder.
	The generated filename includes an estimation of the MB wich will stay
	resident in ram.
	It contains the list of files which firefox needs to start-up, the
	idea is to keep them in ram so that next time firefox will start,
	it will not read them from disk and will start-up much, much faster.

	You can reiterate Prepare.sh as much as you like, think of konqueror,
	nautilus, kwrite, gedit and so on, but don't do too much, because
	your memory is limited.

	***NOTICE:***
	As soon as you update firefox or its needed libraries, you will
	need to (re)Prepare it again!
	To re-prepare your programs in an automatic/batch way,
	(eg: after system upgrades), you can use:
	/usr/share/gopreload/bin/batch_refresh.sh
	--
	
	--
	Non systemd users:
		Now that you 'prepared' your programs, you need to use 'StartPreload.sh',
		and you need root privileges.
		sudo /usr/share/gopreload/bin/StartPreload.sh
	systemd users:
		systemctl start gopreload

	Just sit and wait for StartPreload.sh to preload the file lists 
	you created with Prepare.sh, next time (and forever) you will launch 
	the programs you choose, you will notice a nice speed boost,
	even if you're short of memory.
	StartPreload.sh can be launched with debug parameter:
	./StartPreload.sh debug
	...to see some interesting things.
	--

	You may have noticed that there are two folders under GOPreload:
	* /usr/share/gopreload/enabled/ meaning should now be clear
	* /usr/share/gopreload/disabled/ is empty, you can use it to move filelists
	'on the fly' from enabled/ to disabled/ folder.
	StartPreload.sh will notice the changes and will react accordingly.


Configuration Variables:
	Prepare.sh:
	* MAXMB is the Maximum filesize (in MB) to preload at 'prepare' stage.
	  files bigger than MAXMB will NOT be included in the list.
	  Small files tend to slow down things more than big ones,
	  big files will use a lot of ram, so I suggest you to keep
	  it to a value not greater than 15MB.
	* EXCLUDE_LIST contains a list of file extension you won't preload.
	  Maybe you would like to exclude avi, mp3 and so on...
	  Please, refer to Prepare.sh to learn the syntax.
	
	StartPreload.sh
	* MAXMB is the maximum filesize (in MB) to preload at 'preload' stage.
	  Files bigger than MAXMB will NOT be preloaded, even if they are
	  in the list created by Prepare.sh, set it to "-1" to disable the
	  feature.
	* LONG_DELAY is the time (in seconds) to check if enabled/ disabled/
	  content has changed, don't set it too low or leave as default.


Suggestions:
	* As StartPreload.sh could be very heavy the first time it starts
	  (I use it to load about 150MB of files), I suggest you to launch it
	  with nice and ionice at boot time in your rc scripts using something
	  like that:
	  nice -n 19 ionice -c3 sh -c '/usr/share/goPreload/StartPreload.sh'
	  (this is done automagically by the systemd service)

	* Please note that even if you have, say, prepared konqueror which takes
	  20MB of ram and kwrite which takes 14, it is more likely that
	  if they are preloaded together, they will share a lot of (kde)libs,
	  so you can expect them together to keep only a little more of 20MB.

	* Please note that programs which you prepare can't be swapped
	  to swapfile.

Some Benchmarks; Start Application Times

Program     |WithPreload    |WithoutPreload
            |               |
oowriter    |0m3.502s       |0m11.768s
thunderbird |0m3.704s       |0m12.675s
firefox     |0m5.038s       |0m16.160s
winecfg     |0m2.559s       |0m5.032s
kwrite      |0m1.166s       |0m3.045s

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Preloads files needed for given programs.

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