Return-Path: Received: (majordomo@vger.kernel.org) by vger.kernel.org via listexpand id ; Wed, 28 Nov 2001 11:54:23 -0500 Received: (majordomo@vger.kernel.org) by vger.kernel.org id ; Wed, 28 Nov 2001 11:54:14 -0500 Received: from smtpde02.sap-ag.de ([194.39.131.53]:8834 "EHLO smtpde02.sap-ag.de") by vger.kernel.org with ESMTP id ; Wed, 28 Nov 2001 11:54:08 -0500 From: Christoph Rohland To: Linux Kernel Mailing List Subject: [RFC] Documentation/filesystems/tmpfs Organisation: SAP LinuxLab Date: 28 Nov 2001 17:49:27 +0100 Message-ID: Lines: 15 User-Agent: Gnus/5.0808 (Gnus v5.8.8) XEmacs/21.1 (Cuyahoga Valley) MIME-Version: 1.0 Content-Type: multipart/mixed; boundary="=-=-=" X-SAP: out Sender: linux-kernel-owner@vger.kernel.org X-Mailing-List: linux-kernel@vger.kernel.org --=-=-= Hi, Apparently there is a lack of information about tmpfs out there. So I would like to reduce the Configure.help entry and instead introduce a file Documentation/filesystems/tmpfs with more details. My proposal is appended. Feedback about content and english language is highly appreciated. Greetings Christoph --=-=-= Content-Disposition: attachment Tmpfs is a file system which keeps all files in virtual memory. Everything is temporary in the sense that no files will be created on your hard drive. If you reboot, everything in tmpfs will be lost. In contrast to RAM disks, which get allocated a fixed amount of physical RAM, tmpfs grows and shrinks to accommodate the files it contains and is able to swap unneeded pages out to swap space. Since tmpfs lives completely in the page cache and on swap, all in memory tmpfs pages will show up as cached. It will not show up as shared or something like that. tmpfs has the following uses: 1) There is always a kernel internal mount which you will not see at all. This is used for shared anonymous mappings and SYSV shared memory. This mount does not depend on CONFIG_TMPFS. If CONFIG_TMPFS is not set the user visible part of tmpfs is not build, but the internal mechanisms are always present. 2) glibc 2.2 and above expects tmpfs to be mounted at /dev/shm for POSIX shared memory (shm_open, shm_unlink). Adding the following line to /etc/fstab should take care of this: tmpfs /dev/shm tmpfs defaults 0 0 Remember to create the directory that you intend to mount tmpfs on if necessary (/dev/shm is automagically created if you use devfs). This mount is _not_ needed for SYSV shared memory. The internal mount is used for that. (In the 2.3 kernel versions it was necessary to mount the predecessor of tmpfs (shm fs) to use SYSV shared memory) 3) Some people (including me) find it very convenient to mount it e.g. on /tmp and /var/tmp and have a big swap partition. But be aware: loop mounts of tmpfs files do not work due to the internal design. So mkinitrd shipped by most distributions will fail with a tmpfs /tmp. 4) And probably a lot more I do not know about :-) tmpfs has a couple of mount options: size: The limit of allocated bytes for this tmpfs instance. The default is half of your physical RAM without swap. If you oversize your tmpfs instances the machine will deadlock since the OOM handler will not be able to free that memory. nr_blocks: The same as size, but in blocks of PAGECACHE_SIZE. nr_inodes: The maximum number of inodes for this instance. The default is half of the number of your physical RAM pages. These parameters accept a suffix k, m or g for kilo, mega and giga and can be changed on remount. The initial permissions of the root directory can be set with the mount option "mode". Later on you can change the permissions of the root directory with chmod. So 'mount -t tmpfs -o size=10G,nr_inodes=10k,mode=0700 tmpfs /mytmpfs' will give you tmpfs instance on /mytmpfs which can allocate 10GB RAM/SWAP in 10240 inodes and it is only accessible by root. TODOs: 1) give the size option a percent semantic: If you give a mount option size=50% the tmpfs instance should be able to grow to 50 percent of RAM + swap. So the instance should adapt autatically if you add or remove swap space. 2) loop mounts: This is difficult since loop.c relies on the readpage operation. This operation gets a page from the caller to be filled with the content of the file at that position. But tmpfs always has the page and thus cannot copy the content to the given page. So it cannot provide this operation. The VM had to be changed seriously to achieve this. 3) Show the number of tmpfs pages. (As shared?) Author: Christoph Rohland, 27.11.01 --=-=-=-- - To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-kernel" in the body of a message to majordomo@vger.kernel.org More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html Please read the FAQ at http://www.tux.org/lkml/