-
Senior Member
registered user
Run with ramdisk, update persistent store instead of ramdisk
The traditional way of using persistent store has been to remaster seldom, if at all, and use a rather "large" (as compared to the sizes of short time changes) persistent store, typically 4 GB for FAT32 compatibility. I have usuallly done a couple (1-4) of remasterings of each Knoppix version, and the option of running with just ramdisk has been for special occasions only. I could use the ramdisk -> overlay technique, but I don't find it very useful for me.
With Debian live and much more frequent squashfs remasterings, I have started to look at ramdisk use in another way. Right after a remastering, it won't make much difference whether you run with ramdisk or persistent store, and there may be a few advantages to decide only afterwards whether you want to keep the changes. Also. the need for space is rather limited, it is mostly for program installs and upgrades - almost all user space files (except for init/configuration stuff) are kept on volumes that are mounted the ordinary way.
An alternative way of using persistent store/ramdisk could be to read the content of the persistent store into the ramdisk on startup, run from ramdisk and have the option to save to persistent store as needed, typically with a question about saving on shutdown. Most of the time, I would choose not to save.
Reading from persistent store into the ramdisk takes some time, but with my use, typically below 1 GB used on persistent and SSD disks, it would take only a few seconds. And the machine would run faster.
My total uncompressed system size is around 10 GB. That includes Oracle XE 11g and VMware workstation 10. With default squashfs compression, I have yet to approach the 4GB "limit", but the system is rather bloat-free.
-
Senior Member
registered user
Greetings, Capricorny.
I think you might find MX-14 interesting even though it is
currently a 32-bit Live system, it has built-in persistence
and re-mastering capabilities. The author
of the MX's init is BitJam, who gives Klaus K credit for inspiring it.
With a fat32 base, it has a 4G filesize limit. Uses squashfs for
saving compressed linuxfs, remasterings. Choice at boot on
different persistence combinations.
See http://mepiscommunity.org/mx.
Posting Permissions
- You may not post new threads
- You may not post replies
- You may not post attachments
- You may not edit your posts
-
Forum Rules

Dell R640 8x 2.5" SFF Server iDRAC - Wholesale Custom Build Your Server
$260.99

Dell PowerEdge R630 Server 2x E5-2697v3 2.60Ghz 28-Core 128GB H730P Rails
$295.00

Dell PowerEdge R730XD Server 2x E5-2620 V4=16 Cores | H330 | 32GB RAM | 2x trays
$258.99

Dell Poweredge R630 2x Xeon E5-2680 v3 2.5ghz 24-Cores 32gb 180GB SSD 495w
$169.99

Dell PowerEdge R620 (2x) E5-2650 2.0Ghz 32GB RAM 256GB HDD- NO OS
$52.00

Dell Poweredge R720xd 2x Xeon E5-2690 v2 3GHz 20-Cores 256GB H710 26x Trays
$304.99

Dell Poweredge R730 2x Xeon E5-2670 v3 2.3ghz 24-Cores 32gb H730 iDracEnt
$174.99

Dell R640 8x 2.5" SFF iDRAC 2x 25GbE SFP28- Wholesale Custom Build Your Server
$453.99

Dell PowerEdge R730XD Server 2x E5-2660 V4 = 28 Cores H730 128GB RAM 4x trays
$368.99

Dell PowerEdge R640 10x 2.5" 2x Gold 6132 2.6GHz 28-Cores 128gb H730p 2x 750w
$524.99