leo938: having 128GB of RAM, you should have the entire source tree in RAM cached for basically any build! Nice!
Whenever the build tree is much larger than available RAM, using software-RAID
1 and two identical drives to hold the tree, used to help a lot.
(Wait, isn't RAID1 mirroring? Don't you mean RAID0? No. In Linux, sw-RAID1 reads access only one of the drives, and if the bottleneck is accessing many small files, you can increase the rate significantly –– not double, but somewhat close –– by using sw-RAID1. You lose half the capacity, though. In the past, I did this with spinny rust, in which case the difference compiling the Linux kernel and userspace was significant.)
Nowadays, RAM is so much cheaper, than it is makes much more sense to bulk up on RAM than do that.
Nevertheless, my next desktop/HPC machine will have dual SSD for storage; partially RAID-[01]. I have some very large continuous datasets (hundreds of megabytes) that I'd like to see how fast I can chew trough, mostly MD simulations and such; I'm really looking forward to 1GB/s+ transfer rate for those...
If there are any QChemists using Dalton here, they might wish to try the same. (I'm writing my own simulators and visualizers, though.)
DiTBho, and others:
One reason I'm lusting after a small hobby milling machine (maybe Proxxon MF70), capable of milling 150×100×50mm aluminium blocks into custom heatsink-lids for my SBCs. I often use Hammond die-cast aluminium boxes (and clones) for enclosures, but when dust/waterproof, you need solid connection to the chassis as a heatsink or the SBC will fry eventually. So, outside should be ribbed for maximizing surface area, and inside needs "towers" to contact to the hot chips.
Currently I'm playing with vertical wall-hanging convection-cooled thin sheet steel enclosure for
MikroTik RBM33G – the very same you got recently. My first plan of using a knotty half-round Birch block (to make it
decorative) was too heat-insulating – even if it produces only 3-4 Watts of heat in normal use in my case (LTE firewall) –, but maybe as a shaped veneer on the steel lid. The steel might even help with EM noise stuff, who knows: the official CA433U enclosure definitely is stamped aluminium. (Thin sheet steel is half the price of aluminium here, and much more easily available in automotive stores; otherwise I'd use aluminium sheet myself.)