KDE System Administration/Caches

From KDE UserBase Wiki
Revision as of 23:36, 27 May 2019 by Skierpage3 (talk | contribs) (typos, formatting, -> kbuildsycoca5 name change)

System Caches

There are several caches for KDE data that are created when they are first needed. Especially in setups where there is no persistent HOME directory available or where NFS is used, the creation of the caches can considerably increase the time it takes after login until the Desktop session becomes usable.

This page gives an overview of the existing caches and provides tips on how to improve the caching behavior in your setup.

General

Caches are placed by default into /var/tmp/kdecache-username and a symlink pointing to that cache is placed in the KDEHOME (~/.kde if not set) directory under cache-hostname. You can change that location by setting the KDEVARTMP environment variable.

All caches are memory mapped at startup to improve performance when their contents are accessed. Each user needs is own cache with write access to it.

KSycoca

KSycoca is the "KDE SYstem COnfiguration CAche". It contains a binary representation of the various .desktop files that provide information about installed software and services and which default applications should be used. (See XDG Filesystem Hierarchy for more information about desktop files.) Due to the potential number of desktop files and locations where the desktop files can be stored rebuilding the KSycoca cache can take a while, especially if your /usr directory is mounted on a Network File System.

To check how long this takes on your system you can trigger a full rebuild of the KSycoca database by executing the following in a terminal:

   kbuildsycoca5  --noincremental

Icon Cache

The icon cache is used to store the decompressed pixmaps of used icons so that they can be shared in multiple applications. Although the icon cache does not considerably affect the time it takes for the KDE Desktop to become available after login, it can create a bad user experience when after a long login the users finally opens an icon intensive application like the Start Menu as this will again result in a large number of system calls to find the best size of an icon in various locations.

Plasma Cache

The plasma cache is the largest of the caches when you use Plasma Desktop. But again this contains mostly decompressed Pixmaps of images (like your wallpaper). As those pixmaps are transferred while they are still compressed, persisting this cache on an NFS might even negatively affect your performance.

Other Caches

There are some other caches used by various applications but those are mostly small and do not considerably affect the performance of the Desktop session as a whole.


Using prepared caches to increase performance

To avoid rebuilding the KSycoca and the Icon cache for each new user you can create an up to date cache for your system and copy it on startup into the users cache directory. This will significantly reduce the number of "open" system calls executed when starting a KDE Desktop session. In a deployment where the start of a desktop session took ~80 seconds the startup time could be reduced by this measure to ~50 seconds.

The downside is that you have to manually update this cache after installing or updating new software.

To create your caches:

  • Log in with a fresh user. Open the start menu, maybe start an often used application like dolphin.
  • Copy the files: icon-cache.kcache kdesycoca4 and kdesycoca4stamp from the users cache directory to a globally readable folder e.g.: /var/cache/kde
  • Set an environment variable pointing to the cache. You can do this with:
echo "export KDE_PREP_CACHE=/var/cache/kde" > /usr/share/env/global-cache.sh

(This will be sourced by the startkde script)


Then apply the following patch to your startkde script (or do something similar in there):

--- startkde.orig 2012-11-28 10:38:50.000000000 +0000
+++ startkde 2012-11-29 10:50:05.000000000 +0000
@@ -255,6 +255,28 @@
     fi
 done
 
+# Check if there are prepared caches and copy them to the
+# users location if he does not have any caches.
+# You can use this to speed up initial KDE startup times.
+if test -n "$KDE_PREP_CACHE"; then
+    cache_config_path=$(kde4-config --path cache)
+    if test -f "${KDE_PREP_CACHE}/icon-cache.kcache"; then
+        cp -u --preserve=timestamps "${KDE_PREP_CACHE}/icon-cache.kcache" "${cache_config_path}/icon-cache.kcache"
+        touch ${cache_config_path}/global_icon_cache_used
+    fi
+    if test -f "${KDE_PREP_CACHE}/ksycoca4" -a "${KDE_PREP_CACHE}/ksycoca4stamp"; then
+        if test -n "${KDESYCOCA}"; then
+            cp -u --preserve=timestamps "${KDE_PREP_CACHE}/ksycoca4" "${KDESYCOCA}"
+            cp -u --preserve=timestamps "${KDE_PREP_CACHE}/ksycoca4stamp" "${KDESYCOCA}stamp"
+            touch ${cache_config_path}/global_sycoca_used
+        else
+            cp -u --preserve=timestamps "${KDE_PREP_CACHE}/ksycoca4" "${cache_config_path}"
+            cp -u --preserve=timestamps "${KDE_PREP_CACHE}/ksycoca4stamp" "${cache_config_path}"
+            touch ${cache_config_path}/global_sycoca_used
+        fi
+    fi
+fi
+
 # In case of dcop sockets left by a previous session, cleanup
 #dcopserver_shutdown