On Mon, Nov 05, 2018 at 08:31:46PM +0530, Pintu Agarwal wrote:
Hi,
I have one requirement:
I wanted to have a swapfile (64MB to 256MB) on my system.
But I wanted the data to be compressed and stored on the disk in my swapfile.
[Similar to zram, but compressed data should be moved to disk, instead of RAM].
Note: I wanted to optimize RAM space, so performance is not important
right now for our requirement.
So, what are the options available, to perform this in 4.x kernel version.
My Kernel: 4.9.x
Board: any - (arm64 mostly).
As I know, following are the choices:
1) ZRAM: But it compresses and store data in RAM itself
2) frontswap + zswap : Didn't explore much on this, not sure if this
is helpful for our case.
3) Manually creating swapfile: but how to compress it ?
4) Any other options ?
Loop device on any filesystem that can compress (such as btrfs)? The
performance would suck, though -- besides the indirection of loop, btrfs
compresses in blocks of 128KB while swap wants 4KB writes. Other similar
option is qemu-nbd -- it can use compressed disk images and expose them to a
(local) nbd client.