Hi
I have previously asked this question in python-list, however I think it
belongs here.
I'm running python 2.7.1 on an embedded Linux board and noticed it takes 1.8
seconds to execute the most simple "Hello World" script.
Platform:
cpu: 200Mhz ARM (ARM926EJ-)
kernel: 2.6.38
uClibc: 0.92.1-rc2
My main concern was that a freshly compiled Python attempts to open 168
non-existent files before starting.
I understand that an interpreted language is probably not the best choice
for an embedded device (although it's very nice for prototyping) , Python
really should know what exists after it's
the underlying
"uClibc" frameworkbut then who refreshes the cache.
Thanks for the thoughts and idea, if I find a nice solution I'll be sure to
post an update.
Bruce
On Thu, Mar 24, 2011 at 4:18 PM, James Y Knight wrote:
> On Mar 24, 2011, at 11:58 AM, bruce bushby wrot
it still
happens.
"...How did you measure that?..."
I used "strace -c hello.py"
This is not a dig at Python, I love PythonI was asking if I had missed a
compile option or implementation trick.
Bruce
On Thu, Mar 24, 2011 at 5:05 PM, Stefan Behnel wrote:
> bruce