On Mon, 16.11.15 18:50, bobafetthotmail ([email protected]) wrote: > I have a script that allows me to |mount| a folder to |tmpfs|, while > bind-mounting the same folder to another location, so I can sync the > contents (on startup, shutdown, and when needed) between the |tmpfs| and the > original folder on system drive. > > I use it for folders that see many writes, but whose data should be > preserved after a reboot. > > Mostly to use a USB flash drive or SD card as system drive, while running > programs that aggressively write round-robin databases or similar > small-size-high-write files. > > > Sooo..... I was wondering if systemd allows me to do something like that > natively. > > I did look at the tmpfs modules of systemd, but from what I understood it > does deal with making non-persistent tmpfs on the fly, clean temporary files > from a folder and so on. > > Is there a persistency option I did miss perhaps?
No, there is not. And I don't really see this a strong enough usecase to make it something native. Sorry. Lennart -- Lennart Poettering, Red Hat _______________________________________________ systemd-devel mailing list [email protected] http://lists.freedesktop.org/mailman/listinfo/systemd-devel
