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ep:labs:03:contents:tasks:ex5 [2020/08/03 16:40]
cristian.marin0805 [06. [30p] RAM disk]
ep:labs:03:contents:tasks:ex5 [2022/10/24 00:11] (current)
andrei.mirciu [03. [30p] RAM disk]
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-==== 05. [20pMultitool Comparison ​====+==== 03. [30pRAM disk ====
  
 +Linux allows you to use part of your RAM as a block device, viewing it as a hard disk partition. The advantage of using a RAM disk is the **extremely low latency** (even when compared to SSDs). The disadvantage is that all contents will be lost after a reboot. ​
 +<note tip>
 +There are two main types of RAM disks:
 +  * **ramfs** - cannot be limited in size and will continue to grow until you run out of RAM. Its size can not be determined precisely with tools like **df**. Instead, you have to estimate it by looking at the "​cached"​ entry from **free**'​s output.
 +  * **tmpfs** - newer than **ramfs**. Can set a size limit. Behaves exactly like a hard disk partition but can't be monitored through conventional means (i.e. **iostat**). Size can be precisely estimated using **df**.
 +</​note>​
 +=== [15p] Task A - Create RAM Disk ===
  
 +Before getting started, let's find out the file system that our root partition uses. Run the following command (T - print file system type, h - human readable):
  
-=== [10p] Task A Different tool, same I/O ===+<code bash> 
 +$ df -Th 
 +</code> 
 +The result should look like this: 
 +<​code>​ 
 +Filesystem ​    ​Type ​     Size  Used Avail Use% Mounted on 
 +udev           ​devtmpfs ​ 1.1G     ​0 ​ 1.1G   0% /dev 
 +tmpfs          tmpfs     ​214M ​ 3.8M  210M   2% /run 
 +/​dev/​sda1 ​     ext4      218G  4.1G  202G   2% / <- root partition 
 +tmpfs          tmpfs     ​1.1G ​ 252K  1.1G   1% /dev/shm 
 +tmpfs          tmpfs     ​5.0M ​ 4.0K  5.0M   1% /run/lock 
 +tmpfs          tmpfs     ​1.1G ​    ​0 ​ 1.1G   0% /​sys/​fs/​cgroup 
 +/​dev/​sda2 ​     ext4      923M   ​73M ​ 787M   9% /boot 
 +/​dev/​sda4 ​     ext4      266G   ​62M ​ 253G   1% /home 
 +</​code>​
  
 +From the results, we will assume in the following commands that the file system is **ext4**. If it's not your case, just replace with what you have:
  
 +<code bash>
 +$ sudo mkdir /​mnt/​ramdisk
 +$ sudo mount -t tmpfs -o size=1G ext4 /​mnt/​ramdisk
 +</​code>​
  
-=== [10p] Task B - Plot of Comparison ​===+<​note>​ 
 +If you want the RAM disk to persist after a reboot, you can add the following line to ///​etc/​fstab//​. Remember that its contents will still be lost. 
 + 
 +<​code>​ 
 +tmpfs     /​mnt/​ramdisk ​    ​tmpfs ​    ​rw,​nodev,​nosuid,​size=1G ​    ​0 ​ 0 
 +</​code>​ 
 +</​note>​ 
 + 
 +That's it. We just created a 1Gb **tmpfs** ramdisk with an **ext4** file system and mounted it at ///​mnt/​ramdisk//​. Use **df** again to check this yourself. 
 + 
 +=== [15p] Task B - Pipe View & RAM Disk === 
 + 
 +As we mentioned before, you can't get I/O statistics regarding **tmpfs** since it is not a real partition. One solution to this problem is using **pv** to monitor the progress of data transfer through a pipe. This is a valid approach only if we consider the disk I/O being the bottleneck. 
 + 
 +Next, we will generate 512Mb of random data and place it in ///​mnt/​ramdisk/​file//​ first and then in ///​home/​student/​file//​. The transfer is done using **dd** with 2048-byte blocks. 
 + 
 +<code bash> 
 +$ pv /​dev/​urandom | dd of=/​mnt/​ramdisk/​rand ​ bs=2048 count=$((512 * 1024 * 1024 / 2048)) 
 +$ pv /​dev/​urandom | dd of=/​home/​student/​rand bs=2048 count=$((512 * 1024 * 1024 / 2048)) 
 +</​code>​ 
 + 
 +Look at the elapsed time and average transfer speed. What conclusion can you draw? 
 + 
 +:!: Put one screenshot with the tmpfs partition in df output and one screenshot of both pv commands and write your conclusion.
  
ep/labs/03/contents/tasks/ex5.1596462054.txt.gz · Last modified: 2020/08/03 16:40 by cristian.marin0805
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