Bill Rugolsky Jr. wrote:
I like /tmp to be fast, and /var/tmp to be large, so I create a large
swap
and use tmpfs for /tmp:
Lars E. Pettersson replied:
I have never thought about this. Could you define large. What is
generally
needed in a situation where /tmp is tmpfs?
Well, if you were going to allocate 512 MB for /tmp and 1 GB for swap,
then a 1.5 GB swap is certainly large enough...
One obvious thing to note: data in /tmp gets wiped each time you reboot
the machine. I actually find this really helpful -- I find I do create a
number of temporary files which won't need to last beyond a reboot.
The File Hierarchy Standard (which defines Linux directory names and
uses) declares that any Linux program that expects anything to stay in
/tmp from one run to the next is broken.
Basically, it just works.
James.
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