Hi, swap-create@.service generator for zram devices https://github.com/systemd/zram-generator zram: Compressed RAM based block devices https://www.kernel.org/doc/Documentation/blockdev/zram.txt The gist is, if a configuration file exists, a /dev/zram0 device is created during early boot and marks it for use by swap.target; so all the existing systemd stuff to mkswap and swapon gets used. The nice thing is, very low overhead. RAM is not reserved for the device, it's only consumed as needed. The generator could be installed by default, but without a configuration file. In that case, it doesn't create a swap on zram device, unless the user creates a configuration file. And at some point, the distribution can decide to include a configuration file by default. I'm thinking a useful yet conservative default would be to create a device up to 1:1 with RAM, capping out around 2G-4G. That way small RAM devices, like Pi's, get a pretty big zram device. And large RAM devices just have a smallish swap for incidental usage. One issue (reported upstream in github) is getting priority supported. I don't know whether it needs to be configurable, from the config file. But it seems sane to have the generator set a high priority, so that the zram device is used first, spilling over to a conventional swap if the user creates ones. This is a project in rust. And I think once some of the issues get worked out, it would be great if distributions can converge on this implementation. Thanks, -- Chris Murphy