mkramdisk Command
Purpose
Creates a RAM disk using a portion of RAM that is accessed through normal reads and writes.
Syntax
Description
The mkramdisk command is shipped as part of bos.rte.filesystems, which allows the user to create a RAM disk. Upon successful execution of the mkramdisk command, a new RAM disk is created, a new entry added to /dev, the name of the new RAM disk is written to standard output, and the command exits with a value of 0. If the creation of the RAM disk fails, the command prints an internalized error message, and the command will exit with a nonzero value.
The size can be specified in terms of MB or GB. By default, it is in 512 byte blocks. A suffix of M will be used to specify size in megabytes and G to specify size in gigabytes.
The names of the RAM disks are in the form of /dev/rramdiskx where x
is
the logical RAM disk number (0 through 63).
The mkramdisk command also creates block special device entries (for example, /dev/ramdisk5) although use of the block device interface is discouraged because it adds overhead. The device special files in /dev are owned by root with a mode of 600. However, the mode, owner, and group ID can be changed using normal system commands.
The mkramdisk command is responsible for generating a major number, loading the ram disk kernel extension, configuring the kernel extension, creating a ram disk, and creating the device special files in /dev. Once the device special files are created, they can be used just like any other device special files through normal open, read, write, and close system calls.
RAM disks can be removed by using the rmramdisk command. RAM disks are also removed when the machine is rebooted.
By default, RAM disk pages are pinned. Use the -u flag to create RAM disk pages that are not pinned.
Flags
Item | Description |
---|---|
-u | Specifies that the ram disk that is created will not be pinned. By default, the ram disk will be pinned. |
Parameters
Item | Description |
---|---|
size | Indicates the amount of RAM (in 512 byte increments) to
use for the new RAM disk. For example, typing:
creates
a RAM disk that uses 512 bytes of RAM. To create a RAM disk that uses
approximately 20 MB of RAM, type:
|
Exit Status
The following exit values are returned:
Item | Description |
---|---|
0 | Successful completion. |
>0 | An error occurred. |
Security
Examples
- To create a new ram disk using a default 512-byte block size,
and the size is 500 MBs (1048576 * 512), enter:
mkramdisk 1048576 /dev/rramdisk0
The /dev/rramdisk0 ramdisk is created.
- To create a new ramdisk with a size of 500 Megabytes, enter:
mkramdisk 500M /dev/rramdisk0
The /dev/rramdisk0 ramdisk is created. Note that the ramdisk has the same size as example 1 above.
- To create a new ram disk with a 2-Gigabyte size, enter:
mkramdisk 2G /dev/rramdisk0
- To set up a RAM disk that is approximately 20 MB in size and create
a JFS file system on that RAM disk, enter the following commands:
x is the logical RAM disk number.mkramdisk 40000 ls -l /dev | grep ram mkfs -V jfs /dev/ramdiskx mkdir /ramdisk0 mount -V jfs -o nointegrity /dev/ramdiskx /ramdiskx
To set up a RAM disk that is approximately 20 MB in size and create a JFS2 file system on that RAM disk, enter the following commands:
x is the logical RAM disk number.mkramdisk 40000 ls -l /dev | grep ram /sbin/helpers/jfs2/mkfs -V jfs2 /dev/ramdiskx mkdir /ramdiskx mount -V jfs2 -o log=NULL /dev/ramdiskx /ramdiskx
Note: For both JFS and JFS2, for using a file system on a RAM disk, the RAM disk must be pinned.
Files
Item | Description |
---|---|
/usr/sbin/mkramdisk | Contains the mkramdisk command. |