On 18 Dec 2014 13:45, "Dmitry Gutov" wrote: > > On 12/18/2014 05:15 PM, Artur Malabarba wrote: > >> There's a bit of a small flaw with that approach, it's the reason I used >> find-library. >> If you just check load files against their names, you could find a wrong >> file that has the same name as a feature (we require files in the load >> path to be uniquely named, but load-history contains all files, not just >> those in the load path). > > > Like mentioned, we can also check against the `provide' values in each load-history element we find matching. Shouldn't be a perceptible performance hit. > If it's trivial to do, that's certainly good. >> It's an edge case, and my opinion is that a good performance improvement >> is more important than that. But it seems like the 2 biggest performance >> improvements have already been made (the package initialize, and the >> file true name), so I wonder if it's worth it. > > > 200ms per package initialization still seems a lot to me (even if it's only for certain packages). I also happen to think that the suggested code is a bit easier to understand, but it's up to you. During package-initialize these things add up, so that's certainly a lot. But during a regular upgrade, what fraction of the total load time does that amount to? Even for large packages like helm I think this percentage should be small. But