* [FFmpeg-devel] CI @ 2025-08-19 23:26 Michael Niedermayer via ffmpeg-devel 2025-08-20 15:56 ` Timo Rothenpieler via ffmpeg-devel 0 siblings, 1 reply; 14+ messages in thread From: Michael Niedermayer via ffmpeg-devel @ 2025-08-19 23:26 UTC (permalink / raw) To: FFmpeg development discussions and patches; +Cc: Michael Niedermayer [-- Attachment #1.1: Type: text/plain, Size: 842 bytes --] Hi It seems the forgejo CI takes about 13min to do fate on aarch64 and x86-64 and build on win64 Locally i run fate + install on x86-64 build on x86-32, mingw64, arm32, mips, ppc, x86-64 + shared libs testprogs alltools examples build on x86-64, x86-32 and arm32 in 2min 44sec can we improve the speed vs amount of tests ratio ? (its not a problem ATM, i did in fact not even notice as i never waited on it) Iam just seeing the difference in time and i think there is potential for optimization here I dont think my box here is really special, just a AMD Ryzen 9 3950X 16-Core + Samsung SSD 970 PRO thx -- Michael GnuPG fingerprint: 9FF2128B147EF6730BADF133611EC787040B0FAB While the State exists there can be no freedom; when there is freedom there will be no State. -- Vladimir Lenin [-- Attachment #1.2: signature.asc --] [-- Type: application/pgp-signature, Size: 195 bytes --] [-- Attachment #2: Type: text/plain, Size: 251 bytes --] _______________________________________________ ffmpeg-devel mailing list ffmpeg-devel@ffmpeg.org https://ffmpeg.org/mailman/listinfo/ffmpeg-devel To unsubscribe, visit link above, or email ffmpeg-devel-request@ffmpeg.org with subject "unsubscribe". ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 14+ messages in thread
* Re: [FFmpeg-devel] CI 2025-08-19 23:26 [FFmpeg-devel] CI Michael Niedermayer via ffmpeg-devel @ 2025-08-20 15:56 ` Timo Rothenpieler via ffmpeg-devel 2025-08-20 19:25 ` Michael Niedermayer via ffmpeg-devel 0 siblings, 1 reply; 14+ messages in thread From: Timo Rothenpieler via ffmpeg-devel @ 2025-08-20 15:56 UTC (permalink / raw) To: ffmpeg-devel; +Cc: Timo Rothenpieler [-- Attachment #1.1: Type: text/plain, Size: 1245 bytes --] On 8/20/2025 1:26 AM, Michael Niedermayer via ffmpeg-devel wrote: > Hi > > It seems the forgejo CI takes about > 13min to do fate on aarch64 and x86-64 and build on win64 > > Locally i run > fate + install on x86-64 > build on x86-32, mingw64, arm32, mips, ppc, x86-64 + shared libs > testprogs alltools examples build on x86-64, x86-32 and arm32 > in 2min 44sec > > can we improve the speed vs amount of tests ratio ? > (its not a problem ATM, i did in fact not even notice as i never waited on it) > > Iam just seeing the difference in time and i think there is potential for > optimization here > > I dont think my box here is really special, just a > AMD Ryzen 9 3950X 16-Core + Samsung SSD 970 PRO Well, the test runners are 4 cores and 8GB of RAM. So that'll be the primary difference in speed. I think they're performing pretty good for being just that. We could of course throw money at the problem and turn them into 16 core machines. That would up the hosting cost of the runners from currently 3*7.5€ a month to 3*30€ a month. Just for the runners. imo the current CI turnaround times are fine. 15-20 minutes per job is fine, as long as they can all run in parallel. [-- Attachment #1.2: S/MIME Cryptographic Signature --] [-- Type: application/pkcs7-signature, Size: 4742 bytes --] [-- Attachment #2: Type: text/plain, Size: 251 bytes --] _______________________________________________ ffmpeg-devel mailing list ffmpeg-devel@ffmpeg.org https://ffmpeg.org/mailman/listinfo/ffmpeg-devel To unsubscribe, visit link above, or email ffmpeg-devel-request@ffmpeg.org with subject "unsubscribe". ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 14+ messages in thread
* Re: [FFmpeg-devel] CI 2025-08-20 15:56 ` Timo Rothenpieler via ffmpeg-devel @ 2025-08-20 19:25 ` Michael Niedermayer via ffmpeg-devel 2025-08-20 22:31 ` Timo Rothenpieler via ffmpeg-devel 0 siblings, 1 reply; 14+ messages in thread From: Michael Niedermayer via ffmpeg-devel @ 2025-08-20 19:25 UTC (permalink / raw) To: FFmpeg development discussions and patches; +Cc: Michael Niedermayer [-- Attachment #1.1: Type: text/plain, Size: 2010 bytes --] Hi On Wed, Aug 20, 2025 at 05:56:27PM +0200, Timo Rothenpieler via ffmpeg-devel wrote: > On 8/20/2025 1:26 AM, Michael Niedermayer via ffmpeg-devel wrote: > > Hi > > > > It seems the forgejo CI takes about > > 13min to do fate on aarch64 and x86-64 and build on win64 > > > > Locally i run > > fate + install on x86-64 > > build on x86-32, mingw64, arm32, mips, ppc, x86-64 + shared libs > > testprogs alltools examples build on x86-64, x86-32 and arm32 > > in 2min 44sec > > > > can we improve the speed vs amount of tests ratio ? > > (its not a problem ATM, i did in fact not even notice as i never waited on it) > > > > Iam just seeing the difference in time and i think there is potential for > > optimization here > > > > I dont think my box here is really special, just a > > AMD Ryzen 9 3950X 16-Core + Samsung SSD 970 PRO > > Well, the test runners are 4 cores and 8GB of RAM. So that'll be the primary > difference in speed. > I think they're performing pretty good for being just that. > > We could of course throw money at the problem and turn them into 16 core > machines. That would up the hosting cost of the runners from currently > 3*7.5€ a month to 3*30€ a month. Just for the runners. > > imo the current CI turnaround times are fine. 15-20 minutes per job is fine, > as long as they can all run in parallel. Option 1: 15-20 min CI turnaround, 270 € per year Option 2: 4-5? min CI turnaround, 1080 € per year we have over 150k $ it seems Good use of capital can also lead to more donations I think the main question is, "would we benefit from the faster trunaround"? or not ? thx [...] -- Michael GnuPG fingerprint: 9FF2128B147EF6730BADF133611EC787040B0FAB If the United States is serious about tackling the national security threats related to an insecure 5G network, it needs to rethink the extent to which it values corporate profits and government espionage over security.-Bruce Schneier [-- Attachment #1.2: signature.asc --] [-- Type: application/pgp-signature, Size: 195 bytes --] [-- Attachment #2: Type: text/plain, Size: 251 bytes --] _______________________________________________ ffmpeg-devel mailing list ffmpeg-devel@ffmpeg.org https://ffmpeg.org/mailman/listinfo/ffmpeg-devel To unsubscribe, visit link above, or email ffmpeg-devel-request@ffmpeg.org with subject "unsubscribe". ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 14+ messages in thread
* Re: [FFmpeg-devel] CI 2025-08-20 19:25 ` Michael Niedermayer via ffmpeg-devel @ 2025-08-20 22:31 ` Timo Rothenpieler via ffmpeg-devel 2025-08-21 16:03 ` Kacper Michajlow via ffmpeg-devel 2025-08-21 21:33 ` Michael Niedermayer via ffmpeg-devel 0 siblings, 2 replies; 14+ messages in thread From: Timo Rothenpieler via ffmpeg-devel @ 2025-08-20 22:31 UTC (permalink / raw) To: ffmpeg-devel; +Cc: Timo Rothenpieler [-- Attachment #1.1: Type: text/plain, Size: 2531 bytes --] On 8/20/2025 9:25 PM, Michael Niedermayer via ffmpeg-devel wrote: > Hi > > On Wed, Aug 20, 2025 at 05:56:27PM +0200, Timo Rothenpieler via ffmpeg-devel wrote: >> On 8/20/2025 1:26 AM, Michael Niedermayer via ffmpeg-devel wrote: >>> Hi >>> >>> It seems the forgejo CI takes about >>> 13min to do fate on aarch64 and x86-64 and build on win64 >>> >>> Locally i run >>> fate + install on x86-64 >>> build on x86-32, mingw64, arm32, mips, ppc, x86-64 + shared libs >>> testprogs alltools examples build on x86-64, x86-32 and arm32 >>> in 2min 44sec >>> >>> can we improve the speed vs amount of tests ratio ? >>> (its not a problem ATM, i did in fact not even notice as i never waited on it) >>> >>> Iam just seeing the difference in time and i think there is potential for >>> optimization here >>> >>> I dont think my box here is really special, just a >>> AMD Ryzen 9 3950X 16-Core + Samsung SSD 970 PRO >> >> Well, the test runners are 4 cores and 8GB of RAM. So that'll be the primary >> difference in speed. >> I think they're performing pretty good for being just that. >> >> We could of course throw money at the problem and turn them into 16 core >> machines. That would up the hosting cost of the runners from currently >> 3*7.5€ a month to 3*30€ a month. Just for the runners. >> >> imo the current CI turnaround times are fine. 15-20 minutes per job is fine, >> as long as they can all run in parallel. > > Option 1: 15-20 min CI turnaround, 270 € per year > Option 2: 4-5? min CI turnaround, 1080 € per year > > we have over 150k $ it seems > > Good use of capital can also lead to more donations > > I think the main question is, "would we benefit from the faster trunaround"? > or not ? You have to keep in mind, 4 Core 8GB is also the swarm of runners we get for free from Microsoft via GitHub. So the choice is actually "Be able to process 20+ jobs in parallel that take 15-20 minutes each" vs. "Be able to process 3 or so at a time (roughly one PR/push) in 5 minutes". So realistically, unless we also pay for an actual swarm of runners ourselves(which would cost 10k or more a year while being idle 95% of the time) the total turnaround time including wait for a free runner is probably still better with more of the smaller runners than less of the big ones. It'd also make it a lot more pressing to think about every single CI job we add, vs. having a bit of leeway due to the over-abundance of runners. [-- Attachment #1.2: S/MIME Cryptographic Signature --] [-- Type: application/pkcs7-signature, Size: 4742 bytes --] [-- Attachment #2: Type: text/plain, Size: 251 bytes --] _______________________________________________ ffmpeg-devel mailing list ffmpeg-devel@ffmpeg.org https://ffmpeg.org/mailman/listinfo/ffmpeg-devel To unsubscribe, visit link above, or email ffmpeg-devel-request@ffmpeg.org with subject "unsubscribe". ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 14+ messages in thread
* Re: [FFmpeg-devel] CI 2025-08-20 22:31 ` Timo Rothenpieler via ffmpeg-devel @ 2025-08-21 16:03 ` Kacper Michajlow via ffmpeg-devel 2025-08-21 21:16 ` Michael Niedermayer via ffmpeg-devel 2025-08-21 21:33 ` Michael Niedermayer via ffmpeg-devel 1 sibling, 1 reply; 14+ messages in thread From: Kacper Michajlow via ffmpeg-devel @ 2025-08-21 16:03 UTC (permalink / raw) To: FFmpeg development discussions and patches; +Cc: Kacper Michajlow On Thu, 21 Aug 2025 at 00:32, Timo Rothenpieler via ffmpeg-devel <ffmpeg-devel@ffmpeg.org> wrote: > > On 8/20/2025 9:25 PM, Michael Niedermayer via ffmpeg-devel wrote: > > Hi > > > > On Wed, Aug 20, 2025 at 05:56:27PM +0200, Timo Rothenpieler via ffmpeg-devel wrote: > >> On 8/20/2025 1:26 AM, Michael Niedermayer via ffmpeg-devel wrote: > >>> Hi > >>> > >>> It seems the forgejo CI takes about > >>> 13min to do fate on aarch64 and x86-64 and build on win64 > >>> > >>> Locally i run > >>> fate + install on x86-64 > >>> build on x86-32, mingw64, arm32, mips, ppc, x86-64 + shared libs > >>> testprogs alltools examples build on x86-64, x86-32 and arm32 > >>> in 2min 44sec > >>> > >>> can we improve the speed vs amount of tests ratio ? > >>> (its not a problem ATM, i did in fact not even notice as i never waited on it) > >>> > >>> Iam just seeing the difference in time and i think there is potential for > >>> optimization here > >>> > >>> I dont think my box here is really special, just a > >>> AMD Ryzen 9 3950X 16-Core + Samsung SSD 970 PRO > >> > >> Well, the test runners are 4 cores and 8GB of RAM. So that'll be the primary > >> difference in speed. > >> I think they're performing pretty good for being just that. > >> > >> We could of course throw money at the problem and turn them into 16 core > >> machines. That would up the hosting cost of the runners from currently > >> 3*7.5€ a month to 3*30€ a month. Just for the runners. > >> > >> imo the current CI turnaround times are fine. 15-20 minutes per job is fine, > >> as long as they can all run in parallel. > > > > Option 1: 15-20 min CI turnaround, 270 € per year > > Option 2: 4-5? min CI turnaround, 1080 € per year > > > > we have over 150k $ it seems > > > > Good use of capital can also lead to more donations > > > > I think the main question is, "would we benefit from the faster trunaround"? > > or not ? > > You have to keep in mind, 4 Core 8GB is also the swarm of runners we get > for free from Microsoft via GitHub. > > So the choice is actually "Be able to process 20+ jobs in parallel that > take 15-20 minutes each" vs. "Be able to process 3 or so at a time > (roughly one PR/push) in 5 minutes". > So realistically, unless we also pay for an actual swarm of runners > ourselves(which would cost 10k or more a year while being idle 95% of > the time) the total turnaround time including wait for a free runner is > probably still better with more of the smaller runners than less of the > big ones. > > It'd also make it a lot more pressing to think about every single CI job > we add, vs. having a bit of leeway due to the over-abundance of runners. I agree with Timo, 15-20 minutes is not that bad for a CI job. Faster is ofcourse better, but I would start worrying about it if we actually start noticing the wait time. IMHO it is better to scale to more parallel jobs instead of less faster ones. Also on the topic of CI, I suspect we might add more jobs as needed. Probably depends on priorities, to not overload existing runners capacity. I was wondering about integrating CIFuzz. Which basically runs fuzzers based on coverage data that are affected by the PR changes. And runs fuzzing for N minutes. This would allow it to catch trivial issues, quickly and without the need for turnaround until the issue is reported in the oss-fuzz infra. It uses existing corpus to seed the fuzzing, so it should be good at catching things that are not "hidden" too deep. Though this brings challenges, because it likely would need a separate pool of workers to not starve and build jobs. And not sure how well it would work in practice. For example if change touches too many fuzzers, it wouldn't manage to run them in the time limit of say 20-30 minutes, which is probably the reasonable target. Though all ffmpeg fuzers are specialized for codes, so codec specific code should be fine to test. This is burning CI minutes, but if we have some to spare, say from GH workers, it could help to weed out issues quickly. Thoughts? - Kacper _______________________________________________ ffmpeg-devel mailing list ffmpeg-devel@ffmpeg.org https://ffmpeg.org/mailman/listinfo/ffmpeg-devel To unsubscribe, visit link above, or email ffmpeg-devel-request@ffmpeg.org with subject "unsubscribe". ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 14+ messages in thread
* Re: [FFmpeg-devel] CI 2025-08-21 16:03 ` Kacper Michajlow via ffmpeg-devel @ 2025-08-21 21:16 ` Michael Niedermayer via ffmpeg-devel 0 siblings, 0 replies; 14+ messages in thread From: Michael Niedermayer via ffmpeg-devel @ 2025-08-21 21:16 UTC (permalink / raw) To: FFmpeg development discussions and patches; +Cc: Michael Niedermayer [-- Attachment #1.1: Type: text/plain, Size: 1476 bytes --] Hi On Thu, Aug 21, 2025 at 06:03:12PM +0200, Kacper Michajlow via ffmpeg-devel wrote: [...] > Also on the topic of CI, I suspect we might add more jobs as needed. > Probably depends on priorities, to not overload existing runners > capacity. > > I was wondering about integrating CIFuzz. Which basically runs fuzzers > based on coverage data that are affected by the PR changes. And runs > fuzzing for N minutes. This would allow it to catch trivial issues, > quickly and without the need for turnaround until the issue is > reported in the oss-fuzz infra. It uses existing corpus to seed the > fuzzing, so it should be good at catching things that are not "hidden" > too deep. Though this brings challenges, because it likely would need > a separate pool of workers to not starve and build jobs. And not sure > how well it would work in practice. For example if change touches too > many fuzzers, it wouldn't manage to run them in the time limit of say > 20-30 minutes, which is probably the reasonable target. Though all > ffmpeg fuzers are specialized for codes, so codec specific code should > be fine to test. This is burning CI minutes, but if we have some to > spare, say from GH workers, it could help to weed out issues quickly. > Thoughts? immedeate fuzzing for pr, approved thx [...] -- Michael GnuPG fingerprint: 9FF2128B147EF6730BADF133611EC787040B0FAB It is what and why we do it that matters, not just one of them. [-- Attachment #1.2: signature.asc --] [-- Type: application/pgp-signature, Size: 195 bytes --] [-- Attachment #2: Type: text/plain, Size: 251 bytes --] _______________________________________________ ffmpeg-devel mailing list ffmpeg-devel@ffmpeg.org https://ffmpeg.org/mailman/listinfo/ffmpeg-devel To unsubscribe, visit link above, or email ffmpeg-devel-request@ffmpeg.org with subject "unsubscribe". ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 14+ messages in thread
* Re: [FFmpeg-devel] CI 2025-08-20 22:31 ` Timo Rothenpieler via ffmpeg-devel 2025-08-21 16:03 ` Kacper Michajlow via ffmpeg-devel @ 2025-08-21 21:33 ` Michael Niedermayer via ffmpeg-devel 2025-08-22 5:00 ` Kieran Kunhya via ffmpeg-devel 1 sibling, 1 reply; 14+ messages in thread From: Michael Niedermayer via ffmpeg-devel @ 2025-08-21 21:33 UTC (permalink / raw) To: FFmpeg development discussions and patches; +Cc: Michael Niedermayer [-- Attachment #1.1: Type: text/plain, Size: 3362 bytes --] Hi On Thu, Aug 21, 2025 at 12:31:46AM +0200, Timo Rothenpieler via ffmpeg-devel wrote: > On 8/20/2025 9:25 PM, Michael Niedermayer via ffmpeg-devel wrote: > > Hi > > > > On Wed, Aug 20, 2025 at 05:56:27PM +0200, Timo Rothenpieler via ffmpeg-devel wrote: > > > On 8/20/2025 1:26 AM, Michael Niedermayer via ffmpeg-devel wrote: > > > > Hi > > > > > > > > It seems the forgejo CI takes about > > > > 13min to do fate on aarch64 and x86-64 and build on win64 > > > > > > > > Locally i run > > > > fate + install on x86-64 > > > > build on x86-32, mingw64, arm32, mips, ppc, x86-64 + shared libs > > > > testprogs alltools examples build on x86-64, x86-32 and arm32 > > > > in 2min 44sec > > > > > > > > can we improve the speed vs amount of tests ratio ? > > > > (its not a problem ATM, i did in fact not even notice as i never waited on it) > > > > > > > > Iam just seeing the difference in time and i think there is potential for > > > > optimization here > > > > > > > > I dont think my box here is really special, just a > > > > AMD Ryzen 9 3950X 16-Core + Samsung SSD 970 PRO > > > > > > Well, the test runners are 4 cores and 8GB of RAM. So that'll be the primary > > > difference in speed. > > > I think they're performing pretty good for being just that. > > > > > > We could of course throw money at the problem and turn them into 16 core > > > machines. That would up the hosting cost of the runners from currently > > > 3*7.5€ a month to 3*30€ a month. Just for the runners. > > > > > > imo the current CI turnaround times are fine. 15-20 minutes per job is fine, > > > as long as they can all run in parallel. > > > > Option 1: 15-20 min CI turnaround, 270 € per year > > Option 2: 4-5? min CI turnaround, 1080 € per year > > > > we have over 150k $ it seems > > > > Good use of capital can also lead to more donations > > > > I think the main question is, "would we benefit from the faster trunaround"? > > or not ? > > You have to keep in mind, 4 Core 8GB is also the swarm of runners we get for > free from Microsoft via GitHub. > > So the choice is actually "Be able to process 20+ jobs in parallel that take > 15-20 minutes each" vs. "Be able to process 3 or so at a time (roughly one > PR/push) in 5 minutes". > So realistically, unless we also pay for an actual swarm of runners > ourselves(which would cost 10k or more a year while being idle 95% of the > time) the total turnaround time including wait for a free runner is probably > still better with more of the smaller runners than less of the big ones. > > It'd also make it a lot more pressing to think about every single CI job we > add, vs. having a bit of leeway due to the over-abundance of runners. for 1-2k$ you can buy a box that runs fate once and build on 6 times in under 3minutes. if one is not enough buy 3, use the extra capcity for fuzzing or rent out to other projects I must be stupid, because to me this looks cheaper, its also one time expense these boxes can be used for 10 years also no need to be reliable expensive servers, if you have 3. thx [...] -- Michael GnuPG fingerprint: 9FF2128B147EF6730BADF133611EC787040B0FAB "I am not trying to be anyone's saviour, I'm trying to think about the future and not be sad" - Elon Musk [-- Attachment #1.2: signature.asc --] [-- Type: application/pgp-signature, Size: 195 bytes --] [-- Attachment #2: Type: text/plain, Size: 251 bytes --] _______________________________________________ ffmpeg-devel mailing list ffmpeg-devel@ffmpeg.org https://ffmpeg.org/mailman/listinfo/ffmpeg-devel To unsubscribe, visit link above, or email ffmpeg-devel-request@ffmpeg.org with subject "unsubscribe". ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 14+ messages in thread
* Re: [FFmpeg-devel] CI 2025-08-21 21:33 ` Michael Niedermayer via ffmpeg-devel @ 2025-08-22 5:00 ` Kieran Kunhya via ffmpeg-devel 2025-08-22 12:13 ` Timo Rothenpieler via ffmpeg-devel 0 siblings, 1 reply; 14+ messages in thread From: Kieran Kunhya via ffmpeg-devel @ 2025-08-22 5:00 UTC (permalink / raw) To: FFmpeg development discussions and patches Cc: Kieran Kunhya, Michael Niedermayer On Thu, 21 Aug 2025, 11:33 Michael Niedermayer via ffmpeg-devel, < ffmpeg-devel@ffmpeg.org> wrote: > Hi > > On Thu, Aug 21, 2025 at 12:31:46AM +0200, Timo Rothenpieler via > ffmpeg-devel wrote: > > On 8/20/2025 9:25 PM, Michael Niedermayer via ffmpeg-devel wrote: > > > Hi > > > > > > On Wed, Aug 20, 2025 at 05:56:27PM +0200, Timo Rothenpieler via > ffmpeg-devel wrote: > > > > On 8/20/2025 1:26 AM, Michael Niedermayer via ffmpeg-devel wrote: > > > > > Hi > > > > > > > > > > It seems the forgejo CI takes about > > > > > 13min to do fate on aarch64 and x86-64 and build on win64 > > > > > > > > > > Locally i run > > > > > fate + install on x86-64 > > > > > build on x86-32, mingw64, arm32, mips, ppc, x86-64 + shared > libs > > > > > testprogs alltools examples build on x86-64, x86-32 and arm32 > > > > > in 2min 44sec > > > > > > > > > > can we improve the speed vs amount of tests ratio ? > > > > > (its not a problem ATM, i did in fact not even notice as i never > waited on it) > > > > > > > > > > Iam just seeing the difference in time and i think there is > potential for > > > > > optimization here > > > > > > > > > > I dont think my box here is really special, just a > > > > > AMD Ryzen 9 3950X 16-Core + Samsung SSD 970 PRO > > > > > > > > Well, the test runners are 4 cores and 8GB of RAM. So that'll be the > primary > > > > difference in speed. > > > > I think they're performing pretty good for being just that. > > > > > > > > We could of course throw money at the problem and turn them into 16 > core > > > > machines. That would up the hosting cost of the runners from > currently > > > > 3*7.5€ a month to 3*30€ a month. Just for the runners. > > > > > > > > imo the current CI turnaround times are fine. 15-20 minutes per job > is fine, > > > > as long as they can all run in parallel. > > > > > > Option 1: 15-20 min CI turnaround, 270 € per year > > > Option 2: 4-5? min CI turnaround, 1080 € per year > > > > > > we have over 150k $ it seems > > > > > > Good use of capital can also lead to more donations > > > > > > I think the main question is, "would we benefit from the faster > trunaround"? > > > or not ? > > > > You have to keep in mind, 4 Core 8GB is also the swarm of runners we get > for > > free from Microsoft via GitHub. > > > > So the choice is actually "Be able to process 20+ jobs in parallel that > take > > 15-20 minutes each" vs. "Be able to process 3 or so at a time (roughly > one > > PR/push) in 5 minutes". > > So realistically, unless we also pay for an actual swarm of runners > > ourselves(which would cost 10k or more a year while being idle 95% of the > > time) the total turnaround time including wait for a free runner is > probably > > still better with more of the smaller runners than less of the big ones. > > > > It'd also make it a lot more pressing to think about every single CI job > we > > add, vs. having a bit of leeway due to the over-abundance of runners. > > for 1-2k$ you can buy a box that runs fate once and build on 6 times in > under 3minutes. > > if one is not enough buy 3, use the extra capcity for fuzzing or rent out > to other projects > > I must be stupid, because to me this looks cheaper, its also one time > expense > these boxes can be used for 10 years > > also no need to be reliable expensive servers, if you have 3. > > thx > In the end you're paying for hosting, 24/7 electricity and not having to worry about it. I agree with both viewpoints. For "mission critical" stuff like CI we should host at a proper hosting company. Kieran > _______________________________________________ ffmpeg-devel mailing list ffmpeg-devel@ffmpeg.org https://ffmpeg.org/mailman/listinfo/ffmpeg-devel To unsubscribe, visit link above, or email ffmpeg-devel-request@ffmpeg.org with subject "unsubscribe". ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 14+ messages in thread
* Re: [FFmpeg-devel] CI 2025-08-22 5:00 ` Kieran Kunhya via ffmpeg-devel @ 2025-08-22 12:13 ` Timo Rothenpieler via ffmpeg-devel 2025-08-22 14:51 ` Michael Niedermayer via ffmpeg-devel 2025-08-22 14:54 ` Michael Niedermayer via ffmpeg-devel 0 siblings, 2 replies; 14+ messages in thread From: Timo Rothenpieler via ffmpeg-devel @ 2025-08-22 12:13 UTC (permalink / raw) To: ffmpeg-devel; +Cc: Timo Rothenpieler On 22/08/2025 07:00, Kieran Kunhya via ffmpeg-devel wrote: > On Thu, 21 Aug 2025, 11:33 Michael Niedermayer via ffmpeg-devel, < > ffmpeg-devel@ffmpeg.org> wrote: > >> Hi >> >> On Thu, Aug 21, 2025 at 12:31:46AM +0200, Timo Rothenpieler via >> ffmpeg-devel wrote: >>> On 8/20/2025 9:25 PM, Michael Niedermayer via ffmpeg-devel wrote: >>>> Hi >>>> >>>> On Wed, Aug 20, 2025 at 05:56:27PM +0200, Timo Rothenpieler via >> ffmpeg-devel wrote: >>>>> On 8/20/2025 1:26 AM, Michael Niedermayer via ffmpeg-devel wrote: >>>>>> Hi >>>>>> >>>>>> It seems the forgejo CI takes about >>>>>> 13min to do fate on aarch64 and x86-64 and build on win64 >>>>>> >>>>>> Locally i run >>>>>> fate + install on x86-64 >>>>>> build on x86-32, mingw64, arm32, mips, ppc, x86-64 + shared >> libs >>>>>> testprogs alltools examples build on x86-64, x86-32 and arm32 >>>>>> in 2min 44sec >>>>>> >>>>>> can we improve the speed vs amount of tests ratio ? >>>>>> (its not a problem ATM, i did in fact not even notice as i never >> waited on it) >>>>>> >>>>>> Iam just seeing the difference in time and i think there is >> potential for >>>>>> optimization here >>>>>> >>>>>> I dont think my box here is really special, just a >>>>>> AMD Ryzen 9 3950X 16-Core + Samsung SSD 970 PRO >>>>> >>>>> Well, the test runners are 4 cores and 8GB of RAM. So that'll be the >> primary >>>>> difference in speed. >>>>> I think they're performing pretty good for being just that. >>>>> >>>>> We could of course throw money at the problem and turn them into 16 >> core >>>>> machines. That would up the hosting cost of the runners from >> currently >>>>> 3*7.5€ a month to 3*30€ a month. Just for the runners. >>>>> >>>>> imo the current CI turnaround times are fine. 15-20 minutes per job >> is fine, >>>>> as long as they can all run in parallel. >>>> >>>> Option 1: 15-20 min CI turnaround, 270 € per year >>>> Option 2: 4-5? min CI turnaround, 1080 € per year >>>> >>>> we have over 150k $ it seems >>>> >>>> Good use of capital can also lead to more donations >>>> >>>> I think the main question is, "would we benefit from the faster >> trunaround"? >>>> or not ? >>> >>> You have to keep in mind, 4 Core 8GB is also the swarm of runners we get >> for >>> free from Microsoft via GitHub. >>> >>> So the choice is actually "Be able to process 20+ jobs in parallel that >> take >>> 15-20 minutes each" vs. "Be able to process 3 or so at a time (roughly >> one >>> PR/push) in 5 minutes". >>> So realistically, unless we also pay for an actual swarm of runners >>> ourselves(which would cost 10k or more a year while being idle 95% of the >>> time) the total turnaround time including wait for a free runner is >> probably >>> still better with more of the smaller runners than less of the big ones. >>> >>> It'd also make it a lot more pressing to think about every single CI job >> we >>> add, vs. having a bit of leeway due to the over-abundance of runners. >> >> for 1-2k$ you can buy a box that runs fate once and build on 6 times in >> under 3minutes. >> >> if one is not enough buy 3, use the extra capcity for fuzzing or rent out >> to other projects >> >> I must be stupid, because to me this looks cheaper, its also one time >> expense >> these boxes can be used for 10 years >> >> also no need to be reliable expensive servers, if you have 3. >> >> thx >> > > In the end you're paying for hosting, 24/7 electricity and not having to > worry about it. Yeah, in the end someone has to put these 3 servers somewhere, monitor them for hardware failures, and pay for their electricity. Which isn't exactly cheap for 3 servers either. > I agree with both viewpoints. For "mission critical" stuff like CI we > should host at a proper hosting company. There's also the option of renting a dedicated server from Hetzner or some other company, and put a bunch of runners on there. Hetzner rents you an 8 core Zen4 Ryzen with 64GB of RAM for ~55€ a month. But compared to the current virtual servers we rent from Hetzner, that's a pretty poor "performance per money" ratio, given we get one server with 4 cores and 8GB of RAM, which is plenty for our needs, for 7.5€ a month. So we can rent up to 7 of those, while still paying less than for one dedicated server. And dedicated servers are again more effort, because you do need to manually monitor them for any hardware faults, and then coordinate the replacement with Hetzner, and they do eventually die of old age. There's also the option of writing some tool that automatically scales runners up/down at some cloud provider that bills minutely/secondly (Hetzner bills Servers per Hour, making this a lot less interesting). That would require some serious cost calculation. But I feel like we have plenty of CI downtime to make it worthwhile. But then again, GitHub/MS gives us 20 parallel runners for free, and we can freely pick if they're running on x86_64 or aarch64, Linux, Windows or even OSX. As long as they do that, we only need to host a baseline of runners ourselves, and can scale out into that whenever there's a peak in usage. _______________________________________________ ffmpeg-devel mailing list ffmpeg-devel@ffmpeg.org https://ffmpeg.org/mailman/listinfo/ffmpeg-devel To unsubscribe, visit link above, or email ffmpeg-devel-request@ffmpeg.org with subject "unsubscribe". ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 14+ messages in thread
* Re: [FFmpeg-devel] CI 2025-08-22 12:13 ` Timo Rothenpieler via ffmpeg-devel @ 2025-08-22 14:51 ` Michael Niedermayer via ffmpeg-devel 2025-08-22 14:54 ` Michael Niedermayer via ffmpeg-devel 1 sibling, 0 replies; 14+ messages in thread From: Michael Niedermayer via ffmpeg-devel @ 2025-08-22 14:51 UTC (permalink / raw) To: FFmpeg development discussions and patches; +Cc: Michael Niedermayer [-- Attachment #1.1: Type: text/plain, Size: 6161 bytes --] On Fri, Aug 22, 2025 at 02:13:14PM +0200, Timo Rothenpieler via ffmpeg-devel wrote: > On 22/08/2025 07:00, Kieran Kunhya via ffmpeg-devel wrote: > > On Thu, 21 Aug 2025, 11:33 Michael Niedermayer via ffmpeg-devel, < > > ffmpeg-devel@ffmpeg.org> wrote: > > > > > Hi > > > > > > On Thu, Aug 21, 2025 at 12:31:46AM +0200, Timo Rothenpieler via > > > ffmpeg-devel wrote: > > > > On 8/20/2025 9:25 PM, Michael Niedermayer via ffmpeg-devel wrote: > > > > > Hi > > > > > > > > > > On Wed, Aug 20, 2025 at 05:56:27PM +0200, Timo Rothenpieler via > > > ffmpeg-devel wrote: > > > > > > On 8/20/2025 1:26 AM, Michael Niedermayer via ffmpeg-devel wrote: > > > > > > > Hi > > > > > > > > > > > > > > It seems the forgejo CI takes about > > > > > > > 13min to do fate on aarch64 and x86-64 and build on win64 > > > > > > > > > > > > > > Locally i run > > > > > > > fate + install on x86-64 > > > > > > > build on x86-32, mingw64, arm32, mips, ppc, x86-64 + shared > > > libs > > > > > > > testprogs alltools examples build on x86-64, x86-32 and arm32 > > > > > > > in 2min 44sec > > > > > > > > > > > > > > can we improve the speed vs amount of tests ratio ? > > > > > > > (its not a problem ATM, i did in fact not even notice as i never > > > waited on it) > > > > > > > > > > > > > > Iam just seeing the difference in time and i think there is > > > potential for > > > > > > > optimization here > > > > > > > > > > > > > > I dont think my box here is really special, just a > > > > > > > AMD Ryzen 9 3950X 16-Core + Samsung SSD 970 PRO > > > > > > > > > > > > Well, the test runners are 4 cores and 8GB of RAM. So that'll be the > > > primary > > > > > > difference in speed. > > > > > > I think they're performing pretty good for being just that. > > > > > > > > > > > > We could of course throw money at the problem and turn them into 16 > > > core > > > > > > machines. That would up the hosting cost of the runners from > > > currently > > > > > > 3*7.5€ a month to 3*30€ a month. Just for the runners. > > > > > > > > > > > > imo the current CI turnaround times are fine. 15-20 minutes per job > > > is fine, > > > > > > as long as they can all run in parallel. > > > > > > > > > > Option 1: 15-20 min CI turnaround, 270 € per year > > > > > Option 2: 4-5? min CI turnaround, 1080 € per year > > > > > > > > > > we have over 150k $ it seems > > > > > > > > > > Good use of capital can also lead to more donations > > > > > > > > > > I think the main question is, "would we benefit from the faster > > > trunaround"? > > > > > or not ? > > > > > > > > You have to keep in mind, 4 Core 8GB is also the swarm of runners we get > > > for > > > > free from Microsoft via GitHub. > > > > > > > > So the choice is actually "Be able to process 20+ jobs in parallel that > > > take > > > > 15-20 minutes each" vs. "Be able to process 3 or so at a time (roughly > > > one > > > > PR/push) in 5 minutes". > > > > So realistically, unless we also pay for an actual swarm of runners > > > > ourselves(which would cost 10k or more a year while being idle 95% of the > > > > time) the total turnaround time including wait for a free runner is > > > probably > > > > still better with more of the smaller runners than less of the big ones. > > > > > > > > It'd also make it a lot more pressing to think about every single CI job > > > we > > > > add, vs. having a bit of leeway due to the over-abundance of runners. > > > > > > for 1-2k$ you can buy a box that runs fate once and build on 6 times in > > > under 3minutes. > > > > > > if one is not enough buy 3, use the extra capcity for fuzzing or rent out > > > to other projects > > > > > > I must be stupid, because to me this looks cheaper, its also one time > > > expense > > > these boxes can be used for 10 years > > > > > > also no need to be reliable expensive servers, if you have 3. > > > > > > thx > > > > > > > In the end you're paying for hosting, 24/7 electricity and not having to > > worry about it. > > Yeah, in the end someone has to put these 3 servers somewhere, monitor them > for hardware failures, and pay for their electricity. > Which isn't exactly cheap for 3 servers either. > > > I agree with both viewpoints. For "mission critical" stuff like CI we > > should host at a proper hosting company. > > There's also the option of renting a dedicated server from Hetzner or some > other company, and put a bunch of runners on there. > Hetzner rents you an 8 core Zen4 Ryzen with 64GB of RAM for ~55€ a month. > > But compared to the current virtual servers we rent from Hetzner, that's a > pretty poor "performance per money" ratio, given we get one server with 4 > cores and 8GB of RAM, which is plenty for our needs, for 7.5€ a month. > So we can rent up to 7 of those, while still paying less than for one > dedicated server. > And dedicated servers are again more effort, because you do need to manually > monitor them for any hardware faults, and then coordinate the replacement > with Hetzner, and they do eventually die of old age. > > There's also the option of writing some tool that automatically scales > runners up/down at some cloud provider that bills minutely/secondly (Hetzner > bills Servers per Hour, making this a lot less interesting). > That would require some serious cost calculation. But I feel like we have > plenty of CI downtime to make it worthwhile. > > But then again, GitHub/MS gives us 20 parallel runners for free, and we can > freely pick if they're running on x86_64 or aarch64, Linux, Windows or even > OSX. > As long as they do that, we only need to host a baseline of runners > ourselves, and can scale out into that whenever there's a peak in usage. I guess next time i upgrade my box, i might just keep the old one running in a corner. thx [...] -- Michael GnuPG fingerprint: 9FF2128B147EF6730BADF133611EC787040B0FAB "Nothing to hide" only works if the folks in power share the values of you and everyone you know entirely and always will -- Tom Scott [-- Attachment #1.2: signature.asc --] [-- Type: application/pgp-signature, Size: 195 bytes --] [-- Attachment #2: Type: text/plain, Size: 251 bytes --] _______________________________________________ ffmpeg-devel mailing list ffmpeg-devel@ffmpeg.org https://ffmpeg.org/mailman/listinfo/ffmpeg-devel To unsubscribe, visit link above, or email ffmpeg-devel-request@ffmpeg.org with subject "unsubscribe". ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 14+ messages in thread
* Re: [FFmpeg-devel] CI 2025-08-22 12:13 ` Timo Rothenpieler via ffmpeg-devel 2025-08-22 14:51 ` Michael Niedermayer via ffmpeg-devel @ 2025-08-22 14:54 ` Michael Niedermayer via ffmpeg-devel 2025-08-22 15:22 ` Timo Rothenpieler via ffmpeg-devel 1 sibling, 1 reply; 14+ messages in thread From: Michael Niedermayer via ffmpeg-devel @ 2025-08-22 14:54 UTC (permalink / raw) To: FFmpeg development discussions and patches; +Cc: Michael Niedermayer [-- Attachment #1.1: Type: text/plain, Size: 841 bytes --] Hi Timo On Fri, Aug 22, 2025 at 02:13:14PM +0200, Timo Rothenpieler via ffmpeg-devel wrote: [...] > But then again, GitHub/MS gives us 20 parallel runners for free, and we can > freely pick if they're running on x86_64 or aarch64, Linux, Windows or even > OSX. > As long as they do that, we only need to host a baseline of runners > ourselves, and can scale out into that whenever there's a peak in usage. if they give us 20, can we test mips & arm with qemu in a way that it does not block or delay merges. I mean so that a pr is considered ok and mergeable before tzhe slow qemu fate finishes but after the 2h or so it will display the result in the pr thx [...] -- Michael GnuPG fingerprint: 9FF2128B147EF6730BADF133611EC787040B0FAB He who knows, does not speak. He who speaks, does not know. -- Lao Tsu [-- Attachment #1.2: signature.asc --] [-- Type: application/pgp-signature, Size: 195 bytes --] [-- Attachment #2: Type: text/plain, Size: 251 bytes --] _______________________________________________ ffmpeg-devel mailing list ffmpeg-devel@ffmpeg.org https://ffmpeg.org/mailman/listinfo/ffmpeg-devel To unsubscribe, visit link above, or email ffmpeg-devel-request@ffmpeg.org with subject "unsubscribe". ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 14+ messages in thread
* Re: [FFmpeg-devel] CI 2025-08-22 14:54 ` Michael Niedermayer via ffmpeg-devel @ 2025-08-22 15:22 ` Timo Rothenpieler via ffmpeg-devel 2025-08-22 18:48 ` Martin Storsjö via ffmpeg-devel 2025-08-22 20:31 ` Michael Niedermayer via ffmpeg-devel 0 siblings, 2 replies; 14+ messages in thread From: Timo Rothenpieler via ffmpeg-devel @ 2025-08-22 15:22 UTC (permalink / raw) To: ffmpeg-devel; +Cc: Timo Rothenpieler On 22/08/2025 16:54, Michael Niedermayer via ffmpeg-devel wrote: > Hi Timo > > On Fri, Aug 22, 2025 at 02:13:14PM +0200, Timo Rothenpieler via ffmpeg-devel wrote: > [...] >> But then again, GitHub/MS gives us 20 parallel runners for free, and we can >> freely pick if they're running on x86_64 or aarch64, Linux, Windows or even >> OSX. >> As long as they do that, we only need to host a baseline of runners >> ourselves, and can scale out into that whenever there's a peak in usage. > > if they give us 20, can we test mips & arm with qemu in a way that it > does not block or delay merges. > > I mean so that a pr is considered ok and mergeable before tzhe slow qemu > fate finishes but after the 2h or so it will display the result in the pr We could only run those tests on master, not on PRs. Nobody is impacted by them then, and we still notice breakage reasonably fast. For arm I'm not sure if we really need qemu? All it might take is a 32bit arm chroot on aarch64? Not sure if it works like x86 though, where a 64bit CPU can also run 32bit code. _______________________________________________ ffmpeg-devel mailing list ffmpeg-devel@ffmpeg.org https://ffmpeg.org/mailman/listinfo/ffmpeg-devel To unsubscribe, visit link above, or email ffmpeg-devel-request@ffmpeg.org with subject "unsubscribe". ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 14+ messages in thread
* Re: [FFmpeg-devel] CI 2025-08-22 15:22 ` Timo Rothenpieler via ffmpeg-devel @ 2025-08-22 18:48 ` Martin Storsjö via ffmpeg-devel 2025-08-22 20:31 ` Michael Niedermayer via ffmpeg-devel 1 sibling, 0 replies; 14+ messages in thread From: Martin Storsjö via ffmpeg-devel @ 2025-08-22 18:48 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Timo Rothenpieler via ffmpeg-devel; +Cc: Martin Storsjö, Timo Rothenpieler On Fri, 22 Aug 2025, Timo Rothenpieler via ffmpeg-devel wrote: > For arm I'm not sure if we really need qemu? All it might take is a > 32bit arm chroot on aarch64? Not sure if it works like x86 though, where > a 64bit CPU can also run 32bit code. It works pretty much like x86, yes - you don't need QEMU, you can run it natively on an aarch64 kernel. And you don't need a separate chroot - on Debian/Ubuntu multiarch it's quite straightforward to install 32 bit arm as a separate architecture: dpkg --add-architecture armhf apt-get update && apt-get install g++-arm-linux-gnueabihf libc6:armhf libstdc++6:armhf This is enough for being able to build things for it, with --cross-prefix=arm-linux-gnueabihf- and to run the binaries normally. That said, the very latest generations of aarch64 chips have removed support for executing in 32 bit mode; luckily the recent github aarch64 runners (which are quite cutting edge otherwise, and have features like SVE2) still do support 32 bit. But e.g. on Amazon, the Graviton 4 series no longer supports 32 bit, and the Apple M1 (and newer ones) also lack 32 bit support entirely. // Martin _______________________________________________ ffmpeg-devel mailing list ffmpeg-devel@ffmpeg.org https://ffmpeg.org/mailman/listinfo/ffmpeg-devel To unsubscribe, visit link above, or email ffmpeg-devel-request@ffmpeg.org with subject "unsubscribe". ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 14+ messages in thread
* Re: [FFmpeg-devel] CI 2025-08-22 15:22 ` Timo Rothenpieler via ffmpeg-devel 2025-08-22 18:48 ` Martin Storsjö via ffmpeg-devel @ 2025-08-22 20:31 ` Michael Niedermayer via ffmpeg-devel 1 sibling, 0 replies; 14+ messages in thread From: Michael Niedermayer via ffmpeg-devel @ 2025-08-22 20:31 UTC (permalink / raw) To: FFmpeg development discussions and patches; +Cc: Michael Niedermayer [-- Attachment #1.1: Type: text/plain, Size: 1658 bytes --] Hi On Fri, Aug 22, 2025 at 05:22:54PM +0200, Timo Rothenpieler via ffmpeg-devel wrote: > On 22/08/2025 16:54, Michael Niedermayer via ffmpeg-devel wrote: > > Hi Timo > > > > On Fri, Aug 22, 2025 at 02:13:14PM +0200, Timo Rothenpieler via ffmpeg-devel wrote: > > [...] > > > But then again, GitHub/MS gives us 20 parallel runners for free, and we can > > > freely pick if they're running on x86_64 or aarch64, Linux, Windows or even > > > OSX. > > > As long as they do that, we only need to host a baseline of runners > > > ourselves, and can scale out into that whenever there's a peak in usage. > > > > if they give us 20, can we test mips & arm with qemu in a way that it > > does not block or delay merges. > > > > I mean so that a pr is considered ok and mergeable before tzhe slow qemu > > fate finishes but after the 2h or so it will display the result in the pr > We could only run those tests on master, not on PRs. > Nobody is impacted by them then, and we still notice breakage reasonably > fast. yes, agree > > For arm I'm not sure if we really need qemu? All it might take is a 32bit > arm chroot on aarch64? Not sure if it works like x86 though, where a 64bit > CPU can also run 32bit code. yeah i thought the same a few moments after sending that mail, though i have never tried i guess riscv would then be the next on the list to have at least a build test thx [...] -- Michael GnuPG fingerprint: 9FF2128B147EF6730BADF133611EC787040B0FAB If a bugfix only changes things apparently unrelated to the bug with no further explanation, that is a good sign that the bugfix is wrong. [-- Attachment #1.2: signature.asc --] [-- Type: application/pgp-signature, Size: 195 bytes --] [-- Attachment #2: Type: text/plain, Size: 251 bytes --] _______________________________________________ ffmpeg-devel mailing list ffmpeg-devel@ffmpeg.org https://ffmpeg.org/mailman/listinfo/ffmpeg-devel To unsubscribe, visit link above, or email ffmpeg-devel-request@ffmpeg.org with subject "unsubscribe". ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 14+ messages in thread
end of thread, other threads:[~2025-08-22 20:31 UTC | newest] Thread overview: 14+ messages (download: mbox.gz / follow: Atom feed) -- links below jump to the message on this page -- 2025-08-19 23:26 [FFmpeg-devel] CI Michael Niedermayer via ffmpeg-devel 2025-08-20 15:56 ` Timo Rothenpieler via ffmpeg-devel 2025-08-20 19:25 ` Michael Niedermayer via ffmpeg-devel 2025-08-20 22:31 ` Timo Rothenpieler via ffmpeg-devel 2025-08-21 16:03 ` Kacper Michajlow via ffmpeg-devel 2025-08-21 21:16 ` Michael Niedermayer via ffmpeg-devel 2025-08-21 21:33 ` Michael Niedermayer via ffmpeg-devel 2025-08-22 5:00 ` Kieran Kunhya via ffmpeg-devel 2025-08-22 12:13 ` Timo Rothenpieler via ffmpeg-devel 2025-08-22 14:51 ` Michael Niedermayer via ffmpeg-devel 2025-08-22 14:54 ` Michael Niedermayer via ffmpeg-devel 2025-08-22 15:22 ` Timo Rothenpieler via ffmpeg-devel 2025-08-22 18:48 ` Martin Storsjö via ffmpeg-devel 2025-08-22 20:31 ` Michael Niedermayer via ffmpeg-devel
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