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Top Forums UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers A question about Unix Architecture. Post 302688031 by jim mcnamara on Friday 17th of August 2012 12:24:21 PM
Old 08-17-2012
Another way to look at UNIX/Linux:

A range of scale from small to ridiculous:
It runs some kids toys, your refrigerator, your android, your car, most electric utility billing systems, and very LARGE computer clusters that have thousands of individual computers working on a single problem.

Some of the world's fastest installations are UNIX/Linux clusters.

So it is literally everywhere.
 

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

NAME
mkulzma -- compress disk image for use with geom_uncompress(4) class SYNOPSIS
mkulzma [-v] [-o outfile] [-s cluster_size] infile DESCRIPTION
The mkulzma utility compresses a disk image file so that the geom_uncompress(4) class will be able to decompress the resulting image at run- time. This allows for a significant reduction of size of disk image at the expense of some CPU time required to decompress the data each time it is read. The mkulzma utility works in two phases: 1. An infile image is split into clusters; each cluster is compressed using liblzma. 2. The resulting set of compressed clusters along with headers that allow locating each individual cluster is written to the output file. The options are: -o outfile Name of the output file outfile. The default is to use the input name with the suffix .ulzma. -s cluster_size Split the image into clusters of cluster_size bytes, 16384 bytes by default. The cluster_size should be a multiple of 512 bytes. -v Display verbose messages. NOTES
The compression ratio largely depends on the cluster size used. For large cluster sizes (16K and higher), typical compression ratios are only 1-2% less than those achieved with lzma(1). However, it should be kept in mind that larger cluster sizes lead to higher overhead in the geom_uncompress(4) class, as the class has to decompress the whole cluster even if only a few bytes from that cluster have to be read. The mkulzma utility inserts a short shell script at the beginning of the generated image, which makes it possible to ``run'' the image just like any other shell script. The script tries to load the geom_uncompress(4) class if it is not loaded, configure the image as an md(4) disk device using mdconfig(8), and automatically mount it using mount_cd9660(8) on the mount point provided as the first argument to the script. EXIT STATUS
The mkulzma utility exits 0 on success, and >0 if an error occurs. SEE ALSO
lzma(1), geom(4), geom_uncompress(4), md(4), mdconfig(8), mount_cd9660(8) AUTHORS
Maxim Sobolev <sobomax@FreeBSD.org> Aleksandr Rybalko <ray@ddteam.net> BSD
March 17, 2006 BSD
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