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Bruce Dawson authored
Using goma requires the developer to remember which build directories use goma and which don't so that they can pass an appropriate -j number. Getting this wrong makes builds slower, either by under utilizing resources or by causing a self-inflicted DOS attack. Usage: autoninja -C out/debug autoninja looks at the settings for the specified build directory and then selects either -j num_cores*20 or no -j flag based on the use_goma setting. You can set the NINJA_CORE_MULTIPLIER variable to change from the default 20* multiplier. You can also use NINJA_CORE_ADDITION if you want non-goma builds to specify -j with an offset to the number of cores, such as this Linux command: NINJA_CORE_ADDITION=-2 autoninja -C out/release base This will tell autoninja to pass -j to ninja with num_cores-2 as the parameter. On Windows you can have a ninja.bat file (ahead of ninja on the path) such that autoninja will automatically be used. It should contain this: @call autoninja.bat %* Change-Id: I4003e3fc323d1cbab612999c945b5a8dc5bc6655 Reviewed-on: https://chromium-review.googlesource.com/517662Reviewed-by: Dirk Pranke <dpranke@chromium.org> Reviewed-by: Fumitoshi Ukai <ukai@chromium.org> Commit-Queue: Bruce Dawson <brucedawson@chromium.org>
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