Leonid Isaev wrote:
On Tue, 29 Nov 2011 19:50:46 +0100 "Jérôme M. Berger" <jeberger@free.fr> wrote:
And if your machine only boots very rarely (because it runs continuously or because you hibernate it instead of rebooting) then your "temporary" folder is never cleaned up. The solution that makes the most sense is to have /tmp on a disk and to use tmpwatch [1][2] in a cron job to clean it up regularly.
Jerome
[1] http://fedorahosted.org/tmpwatch/ [2] http://aur.archlinux.org/packages.php?ID=23510
I am not sure what you mean, but we have uptimes averaging 170 days on the cluster (arch/rhel/ubuntu) and never had a single problem with overfull ext2 /tmp (FS size ~10Gb).
You can afford to waste *10Gb of RAM* with files that are not accessed for over 5 months? Man, you're rich :)
Again, you are thinking pure desktop (even not workstation) -- the most important file in your /tmp is a youtube video. What about various backup solutions which run continuously over the above 5 month period? Or various user data which they put in /tmp? Or data from compilation? Or situations when RAM is a resource?
No, actually I'm thinking mostly server (with an average uptime of 6 months). The long uptime means that cleaning /tmp on boot makes no sense since "booting" happens so rarely. Therefore some other means of cleaning it is required and cron+tmpwatch is the best way to do it (you could of course roll your own script to replace tmpwatch, but why go to the trouble when someone else has already done it and tested it in all the stupid corner cases with race conditions, symlinks and so on). Another issue with force cleaning /tmp on boot is that those twice-a-year reboots are often due to external problems (power outage for example). In that case, it is often useful to still have access to the files you were using 5 min before the reboot even if those files will stop being useful in a day or two and can then safely be removed.
Hibernating is a purely windows concept, doing it on a linux machine is basically looking for trouble, especially because hibernation gives no benefits over shutting down.
I never reboot my laptop unless I just upgraded the kernel and I don't have any issues. Hibernation has two benefits over shutting down: - Waking up is faster (ok, that's a small benefit because booting Arch is very fast, but still...) - When waking up from hibernation, you get your desktop exactly the way you left it, including any open files and tasks in progress. This is especially useful when using a laptop on the move: start working on something in the train, hibernate when you arrive at your station, then wake up when you reach your desk and immediately pick up where you left off). This has nothing to do with windows (although I admit that hibernating is a purely laptop concept: I don't hibernate my desktop PC and even less my servers).
And IMHO putting a simple hook into /etc/pm is much more rational than having yet another daemon.
What other daemon? Cron is already running anyway, so all that is needed is a simple hook in /etc/cron.daily. Jerome -- mailto:jeberger@free.fr http://jeberger.free.fr Jabber: jeberger@jabber.fr