| > totally with in their right to challenge you on your claims Yes, and within the limits of common courtesy. The other utility does only one thing - reports disk usage so there's not much to compare. The dev did mention that `ncdu's memory usage is definitely its weak point`. > no other performance metric, no other file system nor device types because lstat64() is at the core of the performance metric of the feature we are comparing here and with the same number of files on the same storage device the number of accesses are exactly the same. The only metric that differentiates the utilities is memory usage. > Edit: the “multiple contributors” point you made is also rather dishonest too. Not really, I prefer to edit the readme myself because I want to keep the documentation clean. You will see features contributed by other devs for which I have written the docs from readme to manpage. Regarding the metrics, sometimes I have taken the data and sometimes I have requested someone else to collect it. Or doesn't that count as contribution? |
RAM is cheap and any file manager will be snappy on an SSD. But edge cases are where most file managers fall apart yet are situations where you might need to depend on your tools the most.
However now I understand the point of this project was purely to optimise against memory usage, I can better understand the arguments you were making.
> or doesn't that count as contribution?
Not in this case, no. You published it, so you’re still ultimately accountable for it.
You cannot request figures then play the “nothing to do with me guv’” card when someone queries the benchmarks that you subsequently published. At best it comes across as an unlikely story; at worst you’re still complicit.