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The contrib Inline Entity Form module is a powerful ally for #drupal site-builders of all skill levels, but it isn’t always immediately evident to new users how to use it.
In the #drupal#ddev KB, I see this note: "Projects should live under the home directory of the Linux filesystem. WSL2’s Linux filesystem (e.g. /home/ <your_username> ) is much faster and has proper permissions, so keep your projects there and not in the slower Windows filesystem (/mnt/c)."
I understand how NTFS adds overhead for reading/writing files, and can cause potentially confusing permission issues, but is "much faster" really true? Like how much much faster?
@ddev That makes sense. I was expecting maybe a 25% performance increase, assuming it was solely typical NTFS issues, but it is literally a 5x-10x speed increase now that I tested. I use WSL on my main filesystem all the time seemingly without the same impact, so it made sense to use my dev drive to host the code
@drupalthoughts I think you could probably set up the new "dev drive", which seems to be intended to solve the NTFS-many-small-files problem, and then enable mutagen, and I'll bet it would speed up really nicely. But so much added complexity for so little value IMO.
Let’s say I have never setup PostCSS on my own and that I am most comfortable with npm + Gulp for compiling Sass (via the #drupal Barrio contrib base theme).
What’s the best resource for getting started with PostCSS? (I bet @starshaped knows)