you know, i don't think saying "got it right" is correct here.
Because if you are presenting an option of walking to a car wash as a valid choice, it suggests you just want to get there, and not wash your car.
Just like walking/driving to an airport doesn't necessarily mean you're going there to catch a flight (although it's a common reason). might as well be picking someone up. or working there.
true, i saw a thread recently on reddit where guy hand-tuned compilation flags and did pgo profiling for a video encoder app that he uses on video encode farm.
In his case, even a gain of ~20% was significant. It calculated into extra bandwidth to encode a few thousand more video files per year.
FWIW i had it with icinga2. so now they actually preload jemalloc in the service file to mitigate the issue, this may very well be what you're talking about
"Make one Ubuntu package 90% faster by rebuilding it and switching the memory allocator"
i wish i could slap people in the face over standard tcp/ip for clickbait. it was ONE package and some gains were not realized by recompilation.
i have to give it to him, i have preloaded jemalloc to one program to swap malloc implementation and results have been very pleasant. not in terms of performance (did not measure) but in stabilizing said application's memory usage. it actually fixed a problem that appeared to be a memory leak, but probably wasn't fault of the app itself (likely memory fragmentation with standard malloc)