SwapSpace
From Openmoko
(Please note that the above warning do not apply to microSD card with wear-levelling algorithms/microcontrollers +sources) |
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Please note that the above warning do not apply to [[microSD]] card with wear-levelling algorithms/mocrocontrollers. | Please note that the above warning do not apply to [[microSD]] card with wear-levelling algorithms/mocrocontrollers. | ||
− | <ref>[http://robert.penz.name/137/no-swap-partition-journaling-filesystem-on-a-ssd/ December 7, 2008, robert.penz.name: No SWAP Partition, Journaling Filesystems, … on a SSD?] | + | <ref>[http://robert.penz.name/137/no-swap-partition-journaling-filesystem-on-a-ssd/ December 7, 2008, robert.penz.name: No SWAP Partition, Journaling Filesystems, … on a SSD?] Quote: "...They assume perfect wear leveling...We stay also with the 2 million cycles and assume a 16GB SSD *With 50 MByte/sec we get 20 years! *With 2 MByte/sec we get 519 years! *And even if we reduce the write cycles to 100.000 and write with 2 MByte/sec all the time we’re at 26 years!!...1. Never choose to use a journaling file system on the SSD partitions: Bullshit, you’re just risking data security. Stay with ext3...7. One more thing to consider is that flash-devices handle their space in blocks. The blocksize typically varies between 16KB and 512 KB. Therefore writing one byte may cause erase and rewrite of up to 512KB..."</ref> |
Please not that you can change the ''swappiness setting'' (value 1) so the swap partition or swap file will be used as little as possible. | Please not that you can change the ''swappiness setting'' (value 1) so the swap partition or swap file will be used as little as possible. | ||
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==References== | ==References== | ||
− | + | <references/> | |
[[Category:MicroSD]] | [[Category:MicroSD]] | ||
[[Category:Application Developer]] | [[Category:Application Developer]] |
Revision as of 10:57, 6 September 2009
WARNING: THIS MIGHT KILL YOUR SD CARD, since there might be alot of read/writes on the same spot. The Freerunner has only 128mb ram, when this is used up applications get killed.
Please note that the above warning do not apply to microSD card with wear-levelling algorithms/mocrocontrollers. <ref>December 7, 2008, robert.penz.name: No SWAP Partition, Journaling Filesystems, … on a SSD? Quote: "...They assume perfect wear leveling...We stay also with the 2 million cycles and assume a 16GB SSD *With 50 MByte/sec we get 20 years! *With 2 MByte/sec we get 519 years! *And even if we reduce the write cycles to 100.000 and write with 2 MByte/sec all the time we’re at 26 years!!...1. Never choose to use a journaling file system on the SSD partitions: Bullshit, you’re just risking data security. Stay with ext3...7. One more thing to consider is that flash-devices handle their space in blocks. The blocksize typically varies between 16KB and 512 KB. Therefore writing one byte may cause erase and rewrite of up to 512KB..."</ref>
Please not that you can change the swappiness setting (value 1) so the swap partition or swap file will be used as little as possible. <ref>fosswire.com: Speed up your system by avoiding the swap file Quote: "...the Linux kernel provides a tweakable setting that controls how often the swap file is used, called swappiness. A swappiness setting of zero means that the disk will be avoided unless absolutely necessary (you run out of memory), while a swappiness setting of 100 means that programs will be swapped to disk almost instantly..."</ref>
Make swap when you are connected to your openmoko with ssh
64M byte of swap just as an example
dd if=/dev/zero of=/swapfile bs=1024 count=65536
Next time you boot there will be swap
echo "/swapfile swap swap defaults 0 0">> /etc/fstab
Make swap
mkswap /swapfile
Make the swap file work now:
swapon /swapfile
Make swap when microSD card is in a card reader
The uSD card is booted on /boot. To use this, we need to make sure that the microsd card is booted, and the Swap can be turned on.
Create the swapfile on the uSD card.
# dd if=/dev/zero of=/boot/swapfile bs=1024k count=128 # mkswap /boot/swapfile
Now, we can put in an init script for Fyp which does this for us everytime we boot.
# touch /etc/init.d/extswap.sh # chmod +x /etc/init.d/extswap.sh # cat > /etc/init.d/extswap.sh #! /bin/sh ### BEGIN INIT INFO # Provides: extswap # Required-Start: mountall # Required-Stop: # Default-Start: S # Default-Stop: # Short-Description: Uses Additional Swap If Available. # Description: ### END INIT INFO PATH=/sbin:/bin . /lib/init/vars.sh . /lib/lsb/init-functions do_start() { if [ -e /boot/swapfile ] ; then for loopdev in `ls /dev/loop* 2>/dev/null` ; do losetup $loopdev /boot/swapfile && swapon $loopdev && echo $loopdev > /var/extswapfile && break done fi } do_stop() { loopdev=`cat /var/extswapfile 2>/dev/null` swapoff -v $loopdev 2>/dev/null && rm -f /var/extswapfile && losetup -d $loopdev } case "$1" in start|"") do_start ;; restart|reload|force-reload) do_stop do_start ;; stop) do_stop ;; *) echo "Usage: extswap.sh [start|stop|restart]" >&2 exit 3 ;; esac # update-rc.d extswap.sh defaults
References
<references/>