Although I have always allocated enormous elbow room for the ever growing /var
recently I don't need near so much sprawl in the slice.  Would you guess that 
the kernel is now cleaning up its own cruft?  Guess that 2G should do it in a 
day and age when you can buy 500 G SSD for less than $100?  Completamente Nueva?

Enjoy the deflation!  But that is sad about Barbie losing her friends!
:(



Ciao!
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---- Matus UHLAR - fantomas <uh...@fantomas.sk> wrote: 

=============
On 22.10.18 15:37, Michael wrote:
>I don't totally need to make /var a tmpfs, it's just out of curiosity, and
> for the simplicity of configuration.  Since /var/cache and /var/log are
> already tmpfs for me, and this extendet tmpfs setup works fine since at
> least 2 years, it seems to be interesting to check the other top folders
> of /var for that option too.
>
>> On 22.10.18 10:02, Michael wrote:
>> >Recently made a lot of stuff tmpfs (like /tmp and /var/cache and 
>> >$HOME/.cache) and i'm not sure about this ...:
>> >
>> >Is there any reason why /var cannot be completely tmpfs ?
>>
>> /var contains huge amount of data that keep changing but must not be lost.
>
>ok, but shouldn't /var contain no configuration-like files ? In other words, 
>are these all files to read or are they just only re-created everytime, thus 
>only to write ? If so, then perhaps could i live with some extra time for 
>starting services / apps to re-create things (if it's only within a second).
>
>For example, here are my /var topfolders:
>
>apt            -> empty
>backups        -> write-only; and i did never need these in about 15 years, so 
>i guess i can live without.
>cache  -> already tmpfs
>lib            -> don't know XXX

e.g. /var/lib/mysql where mysql databases reside. don't remove.
also /var/lib/dpkg contains information about installed packages. Don't
remove unlesas you want to seriously break your system.

>local          -> empty
>lock           -> only a lockfile
>log            -> already tmpfs for me (if i ever need persistent logs, for 
>specific reason, i'll just revert it. It's a desktop machine, rarely problems.)
>mail           -> don't need
>opt            -> empty
>run            -> already tmpf via Debian
>spool  -> cron/anacron, cups .... i guess, no need for persistent

crontabs, mail queues, also something no to lose.

>tmp            -> empty

fiels stored there are temporary, but to be preserved across reboots.

>That leaves /var/lib as a main candidate for problems, because i don't know 
>the usage of what is stored here.

every time you install a package, it may use /var for something you wouldn't
be happy wen losing.
Simply said, don't use tmpfs for /var. Maybe concrete separate
subdirectories, but better none than sorry.

-- 
Matus UHLAR - fantomas, uh...@fantomas.sk ; http://www.fantomas.sk/
Warning: I wish NOT to receive e-mail advertising to this address.
Varovanie: na tuto adresu chcem NEDOSTAVAT akukolvek reklamnu postu.
If Barbie is so popular, why do you have to buy her friends? 


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