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Special Forums Hardware Filesystems, Disks and Memory How To setup a Diskless Swap System. Post 302244866 by Johnny_Thumbs on Wednesday 8th of October 2008 10:37:15 PM
Old 10-08-2008
Excellent question, one I don't have a complete answer for since I've never tried it. Why not load the whole operating system and all the data a person would ever use in there as well? Knoppix has a boot option which allows you to copy all the iso files into RAM. Grab the DVD, boot it toram(if possible on DVD), install WoW into home; that should be about 20GB. When I look at this situation I wonder what is happening on the Front Side Bus and how much of the important data is getting down the channels ahead of non-important. DSL is a derivative of knoppix with the same boot option and when it is booted toram there is still lag due to 100% cpu; Moore's law if you will. How much of the cpu usage is user instructions or system duties like memory management. Filling the tables with pointers to dormant data would increase the Big "O" and place even more demand on an already taped out tech.

Looking at a Motherboard we see it is covered in circuits. For the machine to be operating at 100% efficiency, all the circuits should be pulsing with data simultaneously. The MPU should be at 100% as well as cache memory. One way of side stepping Moore's Law is multitasking the hardware better and increasing bandwidth. Offloading common operations onto hardcoded processors with a direct connection to main cpu and system bus, etc.. But I digress, the most important reason to do this is as a means of upgrading an old computer at low expense. I highly recommend trying to run DSL on an older cpu, it seems the world needed better software a lot more then faster processor speeds. Older machines can act as Firewall/Router/Gateways, web servers, tor servers, file servers, wireless monitors, etc.. Don't sell or throw away that xbox because it has many years left running the latest kernel code.

Last edited by Johnny_Thumbs; 10-08-2008 at 11:41 PM.. Reason: ...spelling...
 

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SWAPON(8)						    BSD System Manager's Manual 						 SWAPON(8)

NAME
swapon, swapoff, swapctl -- specify devices for paging and swapping SYNOPSIS
swapon [-F fstab] -aLq | file ... swapoff [-F fstab] -aLq | file ... swapctl [-AghklmsU] [-a file ... | -d file ...] DESCRIPTION
The swapon, swapoff and swapctl utilities are used to control swap devices in the system. At boot time all swap entries in /etc/fstab are added automatically when the system goes multi-user. Swap devices use a fixed interleave; the maximum number of devices is unlimited. There is no priority mechanism. The swapon utility adds the specified swap devices to the system. If the -a option is used, all swap devices in /etc/fstab will be added, unless their ``noauto'' or ``late'' option is also set. If the -L option is specified, swap devices with the ``late'' option will be added as well as ones with no option. If the -q option is used, informational messages will not be written to standard output when a swap device is added. The swapoff utility removes the specified swap devices from the system. If the -a option is used, all swap devices in /etc/fstab will be removed, unless their ``noauto'' or ``late'' option is also set. If the -L option is specified, swap devices with the ``late'' option will be removed as well as ones with no option. If the -q option is used, informational messages will not be written to standard output when a swap device is removed. Note that swapoff will fail and refuse to remove a swap device if there is insufficient VM (memory + remaining swap devices) to run the system. The swapoff utility must move swapped pages out of the device being removed which could lead to high system loads for a period of time, depending on how much data has been swapped out to that device. Other options supported by both swapon and swapoff are as follows: -F fstab Specify the fstab file to use. The swapctl utility exists primarily for those familiar with other BSDs and may be used to add, remove, or list swap devices. Note that the -a option is used differently in swapctl and indicates that a specific list of devices should be added. The -d option indicates that a spe- cific list should be removed. The -A and -U options to swapctl operate on all swap entries in /etc/fstab which do not have their ``noauto'' option set. Swap information can be generated using the swapinfo(8) utility, pstat -s, or swapctl -l. The swapctl utility has the following options for listing swap: -h Output values in human-readable form. -g Output values in gigabytes. -k Output values in kilobytes. -m Output values in megabytes. -l List the devices making up system swap. -s Print a summary line for system swap. The BLOCKSIZE environment variable is used if not specifically overridden. 512 byte blocks are used by default. FILES
/dev/{ada,da}?s?b standard paging devices /dev/md? memory disk devices /etc/fstab ASCII file system description table DIAGNOSTICS
These utilities may fail for the reasons described in swapon(2). SEE ALSO
swapon(2), fstab(5), init(8), mdconfig(8), pstat(8), rc(8) HISTORY
The swapon utility appeared in 4.0BSD. The swapoff and swapctl utilities appeared in FreeBSD 5.1. BSD
November 22, 2013 BSD
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