There are just over 3,000 images, weighing in at about 197MB of base64 encoded text.
It great to hear the possibilities.
Can you tell the community single file or server, locally or remotely etc...? Just to flesh it out a little.
I tested the prerelease and the indexing made things possible that were not before.
Thanks so much for your ongoing innovation.
Tony
Is the indexing something that happens automatically, or something that you activate?
Thanks!
On Friday, May 31, 2019 at 5:55:37 AM UTC-7, TonyM wrote:Thanks for sharing Jeremy.It great to hear the possibilities.
Can you tell the community single file or server, locally or remotely etc...? Just to flesh it out a little.
I tested the prerelease and the indexing made things possible that were not before.
Thanks so much for your ongoing innovation.
Tony
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What are the physical characteristics of the machine that ran your tests? RAM? Ghz? Make? Type of HD?
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Hi Mark
What are the physical characteristics of the machine that ran your tests? RAM? Ghz? Make? Type of HD?I’ve recently got a modern Mac with 16GB RAM, 512MB SSD and a 3 GHz Intel Core i5. But I went back to my old 2013 MacBook Pro (also 16GB RAM and 512MB SSD) and tried the file there. It only runs 10-20% slower than on the big computer.I suspect that having 16GB RAM has the biggest impact on performance.Best wishesJeremy
Thanks!
On Friday, May 31, 2019 at 3:50:24 AM UTC-7, Jeremy Ruston wrote:Several of the projects I’m working on for Federatial clients involve large wikis, in the 10MB to 100MB range. I’ve posted before about the surprisingly good performance of such large wikis, and recently worked on improving performance further through the introduction of more sophisticated indexing strategies.
As an experiment, today I just tried combining the data from several large wikis to make a compound wiki that weighs in at 874.9MB (nearly a gigabyte!). To my astonishment, Chrome and Firefox will both run it with reasonable performance (Safari complains about resource usage).
The wiki actually only contains 60 tiddlers, of which 13 are plugins containing a total of 64,202 shadow tiddlers (this project uses plugins to package wiki content). There are just over 3,000 images, weighing in at about 197MB of base64 encoded text.
I don’t think such large wikis are practical for everyday use right now, but they certainly will be in the next few years. (None of this is actually to praise TiddlyWiki; it’s the hardworking browser engineers over the last decade that we have to thank).
Best wishes
Jeremy.--
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As you say this is a new threshold that tiddlywiki crosses and think it would be fair to say there is no practical limit to the size for most applications that are not also acting as a large repository of data or media. Then even somewhat large repositories have being demonstrated by you. I believe The encyclopedia Britannica consumes not more than tens of megabytes so when it comes to incedental, business and life data few could ever reach the upper limits with or without storing files or media.
Of course there are limits but I believe few will be reached before server and multiple wiki options are taken and these should lift the potential ceiling higher.
I look forward to 1.5.20
Tony
Ive recently noticed my wiki (10MB) has been very slow, much more so on FF than on chrome. Im very interested in your results, and how I would go about debugging my wiki.
I ran the wiki under Node.js to generate an index.html file that I then ran standalone in the browser.
> I tested the prerelease and the indexing made things possible that were not before.
Does field:y include field:text ?