bbb-webrtc-sfu (and mediasoup) are running in the CFS scheduler which
means it has to compete with (much) lower priority tasks like
presentation conversion, recording processing, [...]
Since it encompasses an RTC application which also handles audio, it
should be _at least_ on the same scheduling policy as FS/bbb-html5 - and
that should be safer now with mediasoup which has a lower footprint
(and generates lower CPU noise overall).
This commit puts bbb-webrtc-sfu in the FIFO scheduling policy (same as
bbb-html5). Also bumps bbb-html5 nice level up to 18 and sets SFU to
nice 19 (so bbb-html5 has some advantage when push comes to shove).
This can be improved further by using per-process priorities in SFU.
Ideally we'd want mediasoup audio workers and mcs-core to be the same
priority as FS (so higher than bbb-html5), but the rest of them
(video/screen workers) to be the same or lower than bbb-html5. For
future reference:
- https://github.com/bigbluebutton/bbb-webrtc-sfu/commit/3e245122dfa155ecb77b536eeadac1e4607cee
- 66d443d204
Files are compressed on build, but gzip_static on isn't set on their
nginx route - so original files are being served, uncompressed.
This commit serves the previously compressed files instead (thus
reducing initial transfer size by ~1 MB).
Someone should look into whether serving compressed version of the rest
of assets makes sense - it probably does.
Still pending: fonts, locales, svgs, everything under resources, ...
* fix unit name: the unit name on Ubuntu is `redis-server.service`
* services which need a working redis require both After= and Wants=
See the description in the `systemd.unit` man page.
yq package is now provided in the BigBlueButton support PPA for BBB 2.5,
so we can depend on the package now. Ensure the dependency is specific
to avoid an incompatible yq version 4 from being installed.