Stephan Seitz <stse+deb...@fsing.rootsland.net> writes: > On Fri, Jun 01, 2012 at 02:19:53PM +0200, Goswin von Brederlow wrote: >>In general your option assumes that you need the maximum amount of free >>space in /tmp. That is simply not true. In most cases a small /tmp is >>just peachy. Because of this it is hard to set a minimum size where >>tmpfs would be too small to be usefull. For some user that would be >>100MB, for others it is 100GB. > > /tmp is for temporary files, so I expect my /tmp to hold all these > files, in my case DVD ISO images (downloaded or localy generated) that > I will burn and then delete. So my /tmp is at least 20GB. BluRay users > may need more.
So you are one of the 100GB users. Personally I thing DVD ISO images (downloaded) belong in your $HOME somewhere. And locally generated should just pipe the image to the burner unless you want to upload the image somewhere, in which case $HOME again. Just imagine a power failure after you painstackingly uploaded 99.9% of the iso and then you have to start from scratch again because a reboot cleans /tmp. > If this is not the meaning of /tmp, then rename it. > > Diskspace is cheap and easier to spare than my RAM. So, yes, if > someone has one 3TB partition which is writeable, then /tmp belongs to > disk not to RAM. > > Shade and sweet water! > > Stephan Just out of interest: Do you have /tmp on /? Because if you do already have a seperate /tmp partition then that obviously stays used. MfG Goswin -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to debian-devel-requ...@lists.debian.org with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact listmas...@lists.debian.org Archive: http://lists.debian.org/87pq9ecg52.fsf@frosties.localnet