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[[Swap]] refers to using storage for volatile data that does not fit into memory.
Swap on SD is currently is broken. The XO currently force-unmounts the SD card at suspend, which loses the swap file and breaks all applications that touched the swap, most notoriously X11.


= Introduction =
[[User:Andrew|Andrew]] 14:22, 9 January 2008 (EST)
:Swapping to a partition would overcome this???


The XO-1 has only 256 MiB of memory (see [[Hardware specifications]]); adding swap space may allow running more simultaneous instances of more complicated applications.
Swap on the internal memory doesn't work either, it causes system freezes. Swap doesn't even like attaching to a jffs2 file, but can be forced by using a loopback device. The internal flash chip is only rated for 3000 writes/cell (Remember when flash could take 100,000 writes? Now we're giving that up for density). JFFS2 will try to spread that across the whole chip, even then swap write patterns are likely bad for it. Try the following at your own risk.


The XO-1.5, XO-1.75 and XO-4 have more memory, so swap space is rarely needed, except for special situations.
su
dd if=/dev/zero of=/var/swap count=128000
/sbin/mkswap /var/swap


Get a [[Secure Digital card]].
#!/bin/sh
You can use a throwaway SD card, these are available for
if [ `cat /proc/swaps | wc -l` == 1 ] ;then
very little. We say throwaway because swapping to it
loopdev=`su -c "/sbin/losetup -f"`
will tend to burn it up faster than its "usual" lifetime for photos
su -c "/sbin/losetup $loopdev /var/swap"
and such. You will still be able to use the rest of the card for
su -c "/sbin/swapon $loopdev"
file storage; about 512 MB will be for swap space. Plug it into the
fi
SD card slot on the XO. You'll have to keep it plugged in the whole
user:[[mike41430]]
time while you're swapping to it; you can't remove it the way you
:The document that the "[[Hardware specification]]" page calls the "[[Media:CL1_Hdwe_Design_Spec.pdf|Definitive Laptop Specification]]", which is dated 9/13/07, says "The endurance of the NAND device is one hundred thousand erase cycles". The [[Swap]] article, with edit dates 12/23-28/07, says the "internal flash chip is only rated for 3000 writes/cell". I do not know which of these statements to believe. Did the "definitive laptop specification" become less "definitive" between 9/13 and 12/23? In particular, I would like to know the endurance rating of the flash memory in my G1G1 XO-1, ordered 11/12/07 and shipped 12/17/07. I also hope that a future release will be fixed so that it will be possible to swap on the built-in SD card slot, or use it as an extension of memory, which seems to be what was intended.
remove a USB drive or a non-swap SD card. When it starts to slow down
after a few years, you can copy any still-interesting user files off
it, throw it away, and put in a new SD card.

= How much swap? =

In the examples below we use 64 MiB of swap. This is a reasonable amount for ordinary interactive use of an XO-1, and can substantially improve user experience when demand is high.

As an example of the improvement, on 13.2.0 one can open many Sugar activities without closing the previous activity, and then switch between them with <tt>alt-tab</tt>. Without swap this is impractical.

Special situations may require more swap.

The device you use may have ample space, so using more is reasonable.

= Swap to a file on a device =
A file on a filesystem on an SD card or USB drive can be used for swap.

Advantages:
* avoids dedicating a partition on external device,
* avoids repartitioning,

Disadvantages:
* the XO may hang if the device is removed without first turning off swap<ref name="hang">once the system is using a resource for swap, it relies on it heavily, and if the resource is lost the system may hang, so you have to make sure it isn't lost, or if it is lost use the power button to reboot.</ref>,
* slightly less efficient<ref>swap to a file on a filesystem is less efficient than swap to partition, but not notably so; the extra CPU cost of remapping the swap I/O is minimal, and at the time the swap is used the system is already under demand.</ref>.

Recipe for Sugar:
* download [http://dev.laptop.org/~quozl/MakeSwap-3.xo MakeSwap-3.xo],
* insert an SD card<ref name="covering">if a child is to be using the laptop with swap, then it may be appropriate to cover the slot with adhesive so that the card is not easily removed.</ref> with a FAT filesystem<ref>MakeSwap does not work with anything other than FAT formatted cards. SD cards are FAT formatted and optimised by the manufacturer, so if you have reformatted them you will need to use other instructions.</ref>,
* run the activity, wait for it to say it is done, then quit,
* the activity can be safely run again (it does nothing new), or erased (swap continues to be available).

Recipe for GNOME:
* remove all other SD cards or USB drives, (to make the following simplest),
* insert the SD card or USB drive<ref name="sd_better">it is best to use an SD card rather than a USB drive</ref>,
* in Terminal, as [[Root]], copy and paste the commands:
# find the SD card or USB drive and make a file name for it
D=/run/media/olpc/
E="$D$(ls $D)"
F=$E/swap
# create a 64 MiB file
dd if=/dev/zero of="$F" bs=1M count=64
# mark the file as a swap file
sudo mkswap "$F"
# start using the file
sudo swapon $F
* to verify the swapfile is being used:
sudo swapon -s
* to safely remove the device,
sudo swapoff -a
* repeat the steps each time you reboot,

Last tested with 13.2.1. Does not work exactly the same way on earlier releases.

= Swap to an entire device =
An entire SD card or USB drive can be used for swap.

Advantages:
* suited to use with a child<ref name="covering" />,

Disadvantages:
* need to repartition the device, which loses all files, and may affect performance of the device,
* the device should not be removed once inserted<ref name="hang" />.

Recipe:
* in the [[Terminal activity]], become [[root]], then install the gparted package:
yum install -y gparted
* insert the SD card or USB drive, and use gparted (Applications -> System Tools -> GParted Partition Editor) to delete the manufacturer's partition and add a linux-swap partition, then add it to the filesystem table:
eval $(blkid -o export /dev/mmcblk1p1) # get the UUID
echo UUID=$UUID swap swap defaults 0 0 >> /etc/fstab # add to table
swapon -a -v # turn on swap

Last tested with 13.2.0.

= Swap to a file on another system, using the network block device =

Swap can be added as a file on another system, with access over network connection using the network block device driver, which is available as a module.

Advantages:
* swap space can be added when needed rather than always available,
* additional swap space can be added at any time,
* no damage to endurance of SD card or USB drive,

Disadvantages:
* the XO may hang<ref name="hang" /> if the other system is shutdown, or the network connection is lost, without first turning off swap,
* the network may be loaded,
* disk space is needed on the other system.

Setup the other system:

# install the nbd package
yum install -y nbd
# create a 64 MiB empty file
dd if=/dev/zero of=/root/xo-swap bs=1048576 count=64
# provide it over network block device protocol on port 1234
nbd-server 1234 /root/xo-swap

Setup the XO:

# install the nbd package
yum install -y nbd
# load the network block device module
modprobe nbd
# attach the network block device to the remote system
nbd-client 10.0.0.1 1234 /dev/nbd0
# make swap space on the block device
mkswap /dev/nbd0
# enable swap space
swapon /dev/nbd0

Last tested with 13.2.0.

= Swap to a file on internal device =

Swap won't attach to a file on internal storage on XO-1, because of a limitation of the filesystem driver, but this can be bypassed using a loopback block device.

Advantages:
* no additional hardware or network required.

Disadvantages:
* the XO-1 will become slower over months instead of years<ref>the XO-1 internal storage is rated for 100,000 writes per cell, the filesystem will try to spread that across the whole device, so using the internal storage as swap will shorten the life of the internal storage, and it will become ''permanently'' slower much earlier than planned by the designers.</ref>.

Recipe:
# set the name of the swap file
FILE=/var/swap
# create the file and preallocate the space
dd if=/dev/zero of=$FILE bs=1M count=64
# write the swap signature pattern into the file
/sbin/mkswap $FILE
# create a loopback block device representing the file
LOOP=$(losetup --show --find $FILE)
# turn on swap through the loopback device
swapon $LOOP

Last tested on 13.2.0.

= Monitoring =

* the {{Code|swapon -a}} and {{Code|free}} commands are helpful for confirming that swap is available,
* using a USB drive with an indicator is helpful for assessing when swap is being accessed,
* the {{Code|top}} command is helpful for seeing how much swap and memory demand is happening.

= Notes =
{{reflist}}

[[Category:HowTo]]

Latest revision as of 01:28, 17 July 2014

Swap refers to using storage for volatile data that does not fit into memory.

Introduction

The XO-1 has only 256 MiB of memory (see Hardware specifications); adding swap space may allow running more simultaneous instances of more complicated applications.

The XO-1.5, XO-1.75 and XO-4 have more memory, so swap space is rarely needed, except for special situations.

Get a Secure Digital card. You can use a throwaway SD card, these are available for very little. We say throwaway because swapping to it will tend to burn it up faster than its "usual" lifetime for photos and such. You will still be able to use the rest of the card for file storage; about 512 MB will be for swap space. Plug it into the SD card slot on the XO. You'll have to keep it plugged in the whole time while you're swapping to it; you can't remove it the way you remove a USB drive or a non-swap SD card. When it starts to slow down after a few years, you can copy any still-interesting user files off it, throw it away, and put in a new SD card.

How much swap?

In the examples below we use 64 MiB of swap. This is a reasonable amount for ordinary interactive use of an XO-1, and can substantially improve user experience when demand is high.

As an example of the improvement, on 13.2.0 one can open many Sugar activities without closing the previous activity, and then switch between them with alt-tab. Without swap this is impractical.

Special situations may require more swap.

The device you use may have ample space, so using more is reasonable.

Swap to a file on a device

A file on a filesystem on an SD card or USB drive can be used for swap.

Advantages:

  • avoids dedicating a partition on external device,
  • avoids repartitioning,

Disadvantages:

  • the XO may hang if the device is removed without first turning off swap<ref name="hang">once the system is using a resource for swap, it relies on it heavily, and if the resource is lost the system may hang, so you have to make sure it isn't lost, or if it is lost use the power button to reboot.</ref>,
  • slightly less efficient<ref>swap to a file on a filesystem is less efficient than swap to partition, but not notably so; the extra CPU cost of remapping the swap I/O is minimal, and at the time the swap is used the system is already under demand.</ref>.

Recipe for Sugar:

  • download MakeSwap-3.xo,
  • insert an SD card<ref name="covering">if a child is to be using the laptop with swap, then it may be appropriate to cover the slot with adhesive so that the card is not easily removed.</ref> with a FAT filesystem<ref>MakeSwap does not work with anything other than FAT formatted cards. SD cards are FAT formatted and optimised by the manufacturer, so if you have reformatted them you will need to use other instructions.</ref>,
  • run the activity, wait for it to say it is done, then quit,
  • the activity can be safely run again (it does nothing new), or erased (swap continues to be available).

Recipe for GNOME:

  • remove all other SD cards or USB drives, (to make the following simplest),
  • insert the SD card or USB drive<ref name="sd_better">it is best to use an SD card rather than a USB drive</ref>,
  • in Terminal, as Root, copy and paste the commands:
 # find the SD card or USB drive and make a file name for it
 D=/run/media/olpc/
 E="$D$(ls $D)"
 F=$E/swap
 
 # create a 64 MiB file
 dd if=/dev/zero of="$F" bs=1M count=64
 
 # mark the file as a swap file
 sudo mkswap "$F"
 
 # start using the file
 sudo swapon $F
  • to verify the swapfile is being used:
 sudo swapon -s
  • to safely remove the device,
 sudo swapoff -a
  • repeat the steps each time you reboot,

Last tested with 13.2.1. Does not work exactly the same way on earlier releases.

Swap to an entire device

An entire SD card or USB drive can be used for swap.

Advantages:

  • suited to use with a child<ref name="covering" />,

Disadvantages:

  • need to repartition the device, which loses all files, and may affect performance of the device,
  • the device should not be removed once inserted<ref name="hang" />.

Recipe:

yum install -y gparted
  • insert the SD card or USB drive, and use gparted (Applications -> System Tools -> GParted Partition Editor) to delete the manufacturer's partition and add a linux-swap partition, then add it to the filesystem table:
 eval $(blkid -o export /dev/mmcblk1p1)               # get the UUID
 echo UUID=$UUID swap swap defaults 0 0 >> /etc/fstab # add to table
 swapon -a -v                                         # turn on swap

Last tested with 13.2.0.

Swap to a file on another system, using the network block device

Swap can be added as a file on another system, with access over network connection using the network block device driver, which is available as a module.

Advantages:

  • swap space can be added when needed rather than always available,
  • additional swap space can be added at any time,
  • no damage to endurance of SD card or USB drive,

Disadvantages:

  • the XO may hang<ref name="hang" /> if the other system is shutdown, or the network connection is lost, without first turning off swap,
  • the network may be loaded,
  • disk space is needed on the other system.

Setup the other system:

 # install the nbd package
 yum install -y nbd
 
 # create a 64 MiB empty file
 dd if=/dev/zero of=/root/xo-swap bs=1048576 count=64
 
 # provide it over network block device protocol on port 1234
 nbd-server 1234 /root/xo-swap

Setup the XO:

 # install the nbd package
 yum install -y nbd
 
 # load the network block device module
 modprobe nbd
 
 # attach the network block device to the remote system
 nbd-client 10.0.0.1 1234 /dev/nbd0
 
 # make swap space on the block device
 mkswap /dev/nbd0
 
 # enable swap space
 swapon /dev/nbd0

Last tested with 13.2.0.

Swap to a file on internal device

Swap won't attach to a file on internal storage on XO-1, because of a limitation of the filesystem driver, but this can be bypassed using a loopback block device.

Advantages:

  • no additional hardware or network required.

Disadvantages:

  • the XO-1 will become slower over months instead of years<ref>the XO-1 internal storage is rated for 100,000 writes per cell, the filesystem will try to spread that across the whole device, so using the internal storage as swap will shorten the life of the internal storage, and it will become permanently slower much earlier than planned by the designers.</ref>.

Recipe:

 # set the name of the swap file
 FILE=/var/swap
 
 # create the file and preallocate the space
 dd if=/dev/zero of=$FILE bs=1M count=64
 
 # write the swap signature pattern into the file
 /sbin/mkswap $FILE
 
 # create a loopback block device representing the file
 LOOP=$(losetup --show --find $FILE)
 
 # turn on swap through the loopback device
 swapon $LOOP

Last tested on 13.2.0.

Monitoring

  • the swapon -a and free commands are helpful for confirming that swap is available,
  • using a USB drive with an indicator is helpful for assessing when swap is being accessed,
  • the top command is helpful for seeing how much swap and memory demand is happening.

Notes

<references group=""></references>