David Woodhouse wrote:
>
> On Mon, 30 Oct 2000, H. Peter Anvin wrote:
>
> > Pardon?! This doesn't make any sense...
> >
> > The question was: how do switch from the initrd to using the ramfs as /?
> > Using pivot_root should do it (after the pivot, you can of course nuke
> > the initrd ramdisk.)
>
> My question is: What do you want to do that for? You can nuke the initrd
> ramdisk, but you can't drop the rd.c code, or ll_rw_blk.c code, etc. So
> why not just keep your root filesystem in the initrd where it started off?
>
Umm... because the size of a ramdisk is fixed, but the size of a ramfs is
flexible?
I can certainly understand this problem... I might in fact do exactly
this in the next version of my SuperRescue disk. There, the ramdisk
which is the real root is populated from a .tar.gz file; the initrd is
just there to unpack the .tar.gz file onto the "real" ramdisk; the initrd
is then jettisoned.
Why not just have the real root be the initrd, you ask? It's too large:
since an initrd needs to exist in both compressed form and uncompressed
form in memory at the same time; it would mean SuperRescue would no
longer work on systems with 64 MB RAM. If I went to ramfs it might
actually work on systems with 48 MB RAM, albeit you better not need to
much space in / (or conversely, it would suddenly let you put a whole lot
more stuff in /tmp if you have 512 MB.)
-hpa
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This archive was generated by hypermail 2b29 : Tue Oct 31 2000 - 21:00:28 EST