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erster wurf

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Robert 2024-10-22 22:42:46 +02:00
parent 1fc3684997
commit 163cdf97d2

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mint/make_swapvol.sh Normal file
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#!/bin/sh
TODO: Das muss noch entwickelt geteset werden
# It is possible to use a swap file on btrfs, but there are some considerations that need taking care of.
# btrfs filesystem doesn't let to create snapshots if there is a working swap file on the subvolume. That means that it is highly recommended to place a swap file on a separate subvolume.
# Let's assume that the current swap is already off, the / is on /dev/sda1 and Ubuntu is installed with / on @ subvolume and /home is on @home subvolume.
# Mount /dev/sda1 to /mnt.
sudo mount /dev/sda1 /mnt
# If you run ls /mnt, you'll see @, @home and other subvolumes that may be there.
# Create a new @swap subvolume.
sudo btrfs sub create /mnt/@swap
# Unmount /dev/sda1 from /mnt.
sudo umount /mnt
# Create /swap directory where we plan to mount the @swap subvolume.
sudo mkdir /swap
# Mount the @swap subvolume to /swap.
sudo mount -o subvol=@swap /dev/sda1 /swap
# Create the swap file.
sudo touch /swap/swapfile
# Set 600 permissions to the file.
sudo chmod 600 /swap/swapfile
# Disable COW for this file.
sudo chattr +C /swap/swapfile
# Set size of the swap file to 8G as an example.
sudo dd if=/dev/zero of=/swap/swapfile bs=1M count=8192
# Format the swapfile.
sudo mkswap /swap/swapfile
# Turn the swap file on.
sudo swapon /swap/swapfile
# Now the new swap should be working.
#
# You also need to update /etc/fstab to mount all this on boot. Add there two lines:
# uuid from Dev
uuid=$(lsblk -n -o UUID /dev/sda1)
sudo echo "UUID=$uuid /swap btrfs subvol=@swap 0 0 /swap/swapfile none swap sw 0 0" >> /etc/fstab
# The UUID is the one of your /dev/sda1.