On Fri, 2009-02-20 at 07:51 -0600, Rex Dieter wrote: > David Jansen wrote: > > > We are running into the same problem here. Why is it a problem? Not the > > disk space taken up by mysqld or the little bit of cpu time it > > takes. But the diskspace on the user's home directories. We have a > > shared home disk here for > 200 people, each has disk quota of 0.5 - 1 GB > > and akonadi's database for some users seems to be taking as much as 140 MB > > And that is even without them being actively using it, it's probably > > just an existing addressbook getting converted to mysql database or so. > > I have no idea how big those databases will grow over time. > > We're currently working on splitting packaging so that akonadi gets > installed only when really used/needed. If anyone wants to help or > participate in testing that, jump onto the fedora-kde list for news. > > But, that doesn't address the size issue. Wow, confirmed, my akonadi dir is > ~163M. ouchie. Looks like another TODO item to look into. ---- you're sort of tossing fuel on the fire but consider... # du -sh /home/craig/.local/share/akonadi/ 144M /home/craig/.local/share/akonadi/ and I've never started kmail, kabc, kontact, kalarm, korganizer on this system ever. This is a brand new installation...no data whatsoever. Viva le mysql/innodb. Though in the larger scheme of things, I don't mind the wasted space and since I'm not actually using it, there aren't many wasted cycles involved, save for the initial screen reporting something about starting akonodai after login...it's just the perception of a heavy footprint. Then of course, there's some obscure error that vanishes from screen almost immediately and I cat ~/.local/akonodai/akonadiserver.error.old Control process died, committing suicide! It's not as if this was going to be an issue wasn't known because of all of the griping that went on when Firefox implemented sqlite which meant that a typical Linux system would be using embedded versions of db4, sqlite and now mysql. One of the earliest comments in this thread bemoaned the bloat of Linux. Craig -- fedora-list mailing list fedora-list@xxxxxxxxxx To unsubscribe: https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/fedora-list Guidelines: http://fedoraproject.org/wiki/Communicate/MailingListGuidelines