On 06-02-09 00:02, Thomas Kunze wrote:
This may be an jffs2 issue. Maybe your kernel uses a compression that
the kexecboot kernel doesn't have.
So if you write much data your jffs2-driver uses the new compression to
recompress some data from the kernels.

If you only install some packages at a time, jffs2 might only use free
space and doesn't do any complex recompression stuff.

But thats just a theory ;)

Jffs2 will choose LZO if the compressed size is the same as zlib. LZO (de)compresses much faster than zlib.

regards,

Koen


_______________________________________________
Angstrom-distro-devel mailing list
Angstrom-distro-devel@linuxtogo.org
http://lists.linuxtogo.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/angstrom-distro-devel

Reply via email to