
-----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE----- Hash: SHA1 Content-ID: <alpine.LNX.2.00.1111211336400.6471@Telcontar.valinor> On Sunday, 2011-11-20 at 23:19 -0500, Ken Schneider - openSUSE wrote:
On 11/20/2011 07:17 PM, Cristian Rodríguez pecked at the keyboard and wrote:
On 20/11/11 20:53, Carlos E. R. wrote:
Having those 370M (I hope shared between all of them) it is an issue for me, because this test system is a virtual machine on VMplayer, with only "756944k" of RAM.
No, it is not. it is the default tmpfs size, (half of your ram not counting swap) that space IS NOT reserved, it is a "hint" to the maximum size that can be allocated.
But I don't see why it is needed. Are there that many mounts per minute so that we need to run the /media on ram?
it is to ease software maintenance, and uses no ram since it is empty.
As in easier to use then "zypper up package1"? What is so fubar'd that some other form of package management is now needed?
We are not talking package management in this thread. - -- Cheers, Carlos E. R. (from 11.4 x86_64 "Celadon" at Telcontar) -----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE----- Version: GnuPG v2.0.16 (GNU/Linux) iEYEARECAAYFAk7KRfgACgkQtTMYHG2NR9UUPQCfWHHHPvT4+Dc1oIk2o36zkjag UScAoI+RNiIgA1NfkDYuCesKlAHGWdWH =m9QQ -----END PGP SIGNATURE-----