On 12/20/2010 10:26 AM, s2_johnm wrote:
On 12/19/2010 09:39 PM, Per Jessen wrote:
Vahis wrote:
On 12/20/2010 12:28 AM, C wrote:
On Sun, Dec 19, 2010 at 21:24, Bernhard M. Wiedemann wrote:
On 2010-12-19 15:03, wrote Vahis:
I have always quite liked a boot option in DamnSmallLinux: toram
When you boot the live system "toram" the whole system is runs only in RAM.
It's unbelievably fast (even in a 200 MHz box with 128 MB RAM).
I wonder if this could be implemented in openSUSE Live?
Vahis
Since normal openSUSE LiveCDs are 700MB (instead of 50MB) plus overlay-writing and apps need some more RAM, that might need more than 1GB of RAM to work, which would limit the usefulnes.
Errr... OK, but.. I'm sure that Vahis didn't mean that he wanted to run a 700MB openSUSE iso in 128Mb of RAM... it was just an example from DSL
All machines sold today have at least 1 GB (they have Windows).
A rough calculation tells me you'd need a bit more than that - stick the ISO in memory, and you're left with 250Mb, which isn't enough to run a GUI with no swap.
For machines with 2Gb and more, it's probably an interesting idea.
Might be cool, yet I think SolidStateDisk drives will negate the usefulness of such an idea. They are getting very fast. Sure, not as fast as accessing RAM, BUT you have to first copy your OS image from disc or HD before you can run it in RAM. This takes time.
You are quite right as for an installed system. But I'm talking about a Live OS situation, that is a user who wants to try out Linux without installing. The speed of a system running completely in RAM is amazing compared to his/her current installed OS. Or an advanced user who wants to use a temporary machine without having to install.
I use a small SSD for my root, while /home /srv and other things are mounted on a HD. I cold boot into KDE in a matter of seconds. BIOS test and grub menu are the bottlenecks now.
I'm still waiting and hoping that SLC disks get cheaper.. Vahis -- http://waxborg.servepics.com openSUSE 11.3 (x86_64) 2.6.34.7-0.5-default -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: opensuse-factory+unsubscribe@opensuse.org For additional commands, e-mail: opensuse-factory+help@opensuse.org