On 05.06.24 16:15, Kevin Chadwick via Dng wrote:
> What do people think of this
>
> https://news.itsfoss.com/debian-13-tmp-mounting/
IMHO, it always should been in tmpfs, for many reaons.
/tmp was invented for *temporary* stuff (things that usually should be
deleted soon) and should be removed on next reboot. (actually, back in
the 90s I've often been angry about long bootup times due rm'ing /tmp)
Earlier versions of tmpfs (actually, ramfs) had a major drawback: non-
swappable. But that's long gone: on memory pressure the pages can get
swapped out exactly like userland pages.
Therefore, /tmp (and /var/tmp is practically the same - often even just
symlinked) really *should* go into tmpfs (probably even w/o memory
limit), because
a) much lower load on disk/ssd (gets written out *only* when necessary)
and no extra write load for metadata (that a disk fs *must* do)
b) therefore *much* better performance (note that it's often also used
as some form of IPC), much less stress on the physical medium
c) safely cleaned on next reboot or remount
--mtx
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Enrico Weigelt, metux IT consult
Free software and Linux embedded engineering
info@??? -- +49-151-27565287