Ridiculous idea: Cache as ramdisk?
Sander Vesik
sander at haldjas.folklore.ee
Thu Sep 25 21:09:09 PDT 2003
J. Kanowitz <jkanowitz at xxxxxxxx> wrote:
>
> Matt saw the 'either you care or you don't' separation that I did, though
> if something somewhere were implemented as a timer, then I assume this
> sort of data could get a magic value of 0 to hang in RAM forever, while
> some other fun use might someday be found for 'priorities' between this
> case and defaults. (I'm pretty sure it doesn't work that way, I'm not
> applying brainpower, I'm just clarifying the initial case to explain what
> I was on about.)
It depends really. An explicit "flush" or "checkpoint" op on it - or
explict syncronisation - may well be acceptable level of "caring". Its
more than MFS based /tmp, where you have to figure out what "syncing"
means and use normal filesystem tools like say... tar.
[snip]
>
> Of course, I forgot to take a multiuser perspective here, and if you're
> doing this *because* something's going to make a mess, you probably aren't
> going to remember to 'rm' the files afterwards, there might need to be
> quotas per-user (hm, so now that's tracking by process and by owner/user?),
> you'd want some other utility that would be a rough hybrid of newfs/unmount
> and rm -rf /tmp (making, say, all a user's 'blazed' files disappear and
> freeing the associated memory), and it all starts to sound as half-baked
> as it really was. ;)
if you can explicitly allocate per process tree branch / logical partition
swap you wouldn't have teh problem. all users woul get their own jail and
a swap area allocated from vinum and won't be able to hog others resources.
>
> The discussion is great stuff, in any case. Right now I need to wake up
> enough to actually start learning from it again!
>
> -Joe "Floid" Kanowitz
--
Sander
+++ Out of cheese error +++
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