hackyhacky a day ago

Rather than re-write your scripts to store temp files into /dev/shm, you can just mount /tmp using the tmpfs file system and get the same benefit for all your programs. Some distros do this by default.

The relevant line from fstab is:

    tmpfs /tmp            tmpfs    noatime 0       2
Now any program that writes to /tmp will be writing to a RAM disk, thus sparing unnecessary wear on my SSD.
  • hiAndrewQuinn a day ago

    I do mention this offhand in the article: "The existence of /dev/shm is a boon for me mostly because it means I never have to worry about whether /tmp is really RAM-based again."

    • frollogaston a day ago

      "virtually every Unix system already has it mounted as a tmpfs by default" might be true if you say Linux instead, but Mac doesn't have /dev/shm

      • AdieuToLogic a day ago

        OS-X/macOS supports RAM drives and a script which defines one for use as /private/tmp (which /tmp is symbolically linked to) is:

          #!/bin/bash
          ramfs_size_mb=1024
          mount_point=/private/tmp
          
          counter=0
          ramfs_size_sectors=$((${ramfs_size_mb}*2048))
          ramdisk_dev=`hdiutil attach -nomount ram://${ramfs_size_sectors}`
          
          while [[ ! -d "/Volumes" ]]
          do
           sleep 1
           counter=$((counter + 1))
          
           if [[ $counter -gt 10 ]]
           then
            echo "$O: /Volumes never created"
            exit 1
           fi
          done
          
          diskutil eraseVolume HFS+ 'RAM Disk' ${ramdisk_dev} || {
           echo "$O: unable to create RAM Disk on: ${ramdisk_dev}"
           exit 2
          }
          
          umount '/Volumes/RAM Disk'
          
          mkdir -p ${mount_point} 2>/dev/null
          mount -o noatime -t hfs ${ramdisk_dev} ${mount_point} || {
           echo "$0: unable to mount ${ramdisk_dev} ${mount_point}"
           exit 3
          }
          
          chown root:wheel ${mount_point}
          chmod 1777 ${mount_point}
        
        Adding a plist definition to /Library/LaunchDaemons can ensure the above is executed when the system starts.
      • hiAndrewQuinn a day ago

        Mea culpa, you're right. I should not have assumed that just because POSIX was mentioned in the orbit of this thing that everyone else had this too.

        The article has been corrected.

      • loeg a day ago

        I may misremember, but I think it's also common in the BSDs? (Whereas /var/tmp is persisted.)

        • frollogaston 6 hours ago

          Yeah, Mac is probably the odd one out, but it's also maybe the most common Unix-based/Unix-like desktop OS. Anyway, both are POSIX, unlike Linux.

    • quotemstr a day ago

      Now you have to worry about whether you can access /dev/shm. Please encourage people to use supported interfaces instead of random voodoo (anything under /dev that wasn't there in 1995) for day-to-day tasks.

      • hiAndrewQuinn a day ago

        /dev/shm is typically world-writable by default:

            $ ls -ld /dev/shm
            drwxrwxrwt 3 root root 120 Jun 32 02:47 /dev/shm/
        
        Incidentally, "30 years ago" is the cutoff date for music being considered the oldies. This just made me realize Nevermind is now an oldie, and soon The Lonesome Crowded West will be too.
        • chaps a day ago

          A past role in a past life had me installing security services on servers. One server had incredibly awkward permission sets across its common directories so our deployment script failed. The fix? Just throw it into /dev/shm and install it directly from there. It worked great.

        • throwaway992673 a day ago

          "And it's been a long time, which agrees with this watch of mine"

        • quotemstr a day ago

          > /dev/shm is typically world-writable by default:

          You are relying on random implementation details instead of universal APIs that work across OSes and environments. Please stop.

          So help me God, if I make a Linux system, I will make it _not_ have a /dev/shm just to avoid people relying on non-standard stuff for no good reason. Honestly, it's because of stuff like this that we need Docker.

          • frollogaston a day ago

            /tmp isn't a standard place for RAM disk either, all it says is: https://refspecs.linuxfoundation.org/FHS_3.0/fhs/ch03s18.htm...

            I'm not really seeing a right or wrong here anyway unless you're distributing a script that's meant to run on all sorts of Linux systems. In which case you probably aren't concerned with the physical storage medium being used.

            • quotemstr a day ago

              /tmp is literally POSIX:

              https://pubs.opengroup.org/onlinepubs/9799919799/

              It doesn't get more standard than that.

              It's because of people doing random nonstandard shit that we need to Docker-ize a lot of software these days. People refuse to lift a single finger to adhere to conventions that let programs co-exist without simulating a whole god damn computational universe for each damn program.

              • fluidcruft a day ago

                /tmp is not specified to be a RAM disk by POSIX. Just that things in there are considered to be not persistent after a program stops (with implications for backups and disaster recovery). Sure, RAM disks work if the amount of /tmp space you need is less than your free physical RAM but sometimes that's not the case, either.

                Back in the day you might place /tmp in a good spot for random access of small files on a disk platter. /var is vaguely similar but intended for things that need to be persistent.

                Anyway it's not uncommon for systems to persist /tmp and clean it periodically from cron using various retention heuristics.

                Ultimately POSIX concepts of mountpoints are strongly tied to optimizing spinning rust performance and maintenance and not necessarily relevant for SSD/NVME.

              • gyesxnuibh a day ago

                > /tmp A directory made available for applications that need a place to create temporary files. Applications shall be allowed to create files in this directory, but shall not assume that such files are preserved between invocations of the application.

                It doesn't say anything about what it's backed by.

              • frollogaston a day ago

                I meant the author specifically wants to write files to RAM and nowhere else. There isn't a standard place for that.

          • half-kh-hacker a day ago

            file-hierarchy(7) states /dev/shm is tmpfs and that "all users have write access to this directory", so I think you'd have to be making a non-systemd distro

            • hackyhacky a day ago

              It also says:

              > Usually, it is a better idea to use memory mapped files in /run/ (for system programs) or $XDG_RUNTIME_DIR (for user programs) instead of POSIX shared memory segments, since these directories are not world-writable and hence not vulnerable to security-sensitive name clashes.

              $XDG_RUNTIME_DIR usually points to /run/user/${uid}, so you're guaranteed that other users won't write there, and possibly won't even be able to read there.

      • wredcoll a day ago

        This is a ridiculous comment but it did make me curious, when did /dev/shm become a common thing?

        My current understanding is kernel 2.6, i.e. 2004.

        • esseph a day ago

          2.4 in 2001 is when it was released with kernel support

  • chrisdeso a day ago

    This is the first linux "thing" I've understood after a first read on hacker news. Love you all and will give this a whirl.

  • godelski a day ago

    Another thing you can do is use systemd and use the privatetmp option. You really should be doing this on all your services

  • pkulak a day ago

    I did this for a while, but writing files to ram can be dangerous, since most things assume unlimited disk space. I noticed that updates would fail on machines that had 16 gigs of ram unless I logged out of my window manager and did it from the TTY. Took quite a long time to realize it was because of all the compiles writing to /tmp. Much easier to just let the SSD get used.

    • buckle8017 a day ago

      This is why having swap even when you have plenty of memory for normal usage is good.

      Swap on an SSD isn't even that slow.

      • pkulak a day ago

        You know what, your comment actually reminds me that this happened when I also had a bug in my configuration that was causing me to not actually use swap. I assume running out of tmpfs uses swap like anything else? I might give tmpfs another try.

        • AdieuToLogic a day ago

          > I assume running out of tmpfs uses swap like anything else?

          This is not the case. RAM-based file system capacities are unrelated to process memory usage, of which "swap space" is for the latter.

          • tatref a day ago

            That's why on some configurations (RHEL 7 I think), journald will happily fill up your ram via /run/

            • AdieuToLogic a day ago

              > That's why on some configurations (RHEL 7 I think), journald will happily fill up your ram via /run/

              I do not run systemd-based distros, so cannot relate.

          • pkulak a day ago

            Interesting, thank you. I stand by my original point, downvotes be damned.

            • AdieuToLogic a day ago

              > Interesting, thank you.

              Glad to help out. Here[0] is more information regarding Linux swap space as it relates to processes and the VMM subsystem.

              > I stand by my original point, downvotes be damned.

              :-D

              0 - https://phoenixnap.com/kb/swap-space

          • buckle8017 a day ago

            tmpfs will swap.

            • AdieuToLogic 7 hours ago

              > tmpfs will swap.

              We are both wrong to a degree, but you are more correct than I was.

              According to the docs[0]:

                tmpfs ... is able to swap unneeded pages out to swap
                space, if swap was enabled for the tmpfs mount.
              
              So `tmpfs` does not unconditionally use swap, but can use it if possible. What I was thinking about is `ramfs`, which doesn't support swap, but that is not the topic of the question to which I replied.

              0 - https://www.kernel.org/doc/html/latest/filesystems/tmpfs.htm...

        • buckle8017 a day ago

          Sibling is wrong tmpfs will swap.

          Maybe some other ram disk things won't.

  • frollogaston a day ago

    If I already have /tmp and it's not tmpfs, honestly I'm not gonna bother remapping it.

  • bbarnett a day ago

    A decade ago yes, but these days, SSD wear isn't an issue for desktop users.

  • pm2222 a day ago

    Systemd clears /tmp from time to time. Just saying.

ctur a day ago

This is an unnecessary optimization, particularly for the article's use case (small files that are read immediately after being written). Just use /tmp. The linux buffer cache is more than performant enough for casual usage and, indeed, most heavy usage too. It's far too easy to clog up memory with forgotten files by defaulting to /dev/shm, for instance, and you potentially also take memory away from the rest of the system until the next reboot.

For the author's purposes, any benefit is just placebo.

There absolutely are times where /dev/shm is what you want, but it requires understanding nuances and tradeoffs (e.g. you are already thinking a lot about the memory management going on, including potentially swap).

Don't use -funroll-loops either.

  • hiAndrewQuinn a day ago

    It's true that with small files, my primary interest is simply not to wear on my disk unnecessarily. However I do also often do work on large files, usually local data processing work.

    "This optimization [of putting files directly into RAM instead of trusting the buffers] is unnecessary" was an interesting claim, so I decided to put it to the test with `time`.

        $ # Drop any disk caches first.
        $ sudo sh -c 'sync; echo 3 > /proc/sys/vm/drop_caches'
        $ 
        $ # Read a 3.5 GB JSON Lines file from disk.
        $ time wc -l /home/andrew/Downloads/kaikki.org-dictionary-Finnish.jsonl 
        255111 /home/andrew/Downloads/kaikki.org-dictionary-Finnish.jsonl
    
        real 0m2.249s
        user 0m0.048s
        sys 0m0.809s
    
        $ # Now with caching.
        $ time wc -l /dev/shm/kaikki.org-dictionary-Finnish.jsonl 
        255111 /dev/shm/kaikki.org-dictionary-Finnish.jsonl
        
        real 0m0.528s
        user 0m0.028s
        sys 0m0.500s
    
        $ 
        $ # Drop caches again, just to be certain.
        $ sudo sh -c 'sync; echo 3 > /proc/sys/vm/drop_caches'
        $ 
        $ # Read that same 3.5 GB LSON Lines file from /dev/shm.
        $ time wc -l /dev/shm/kaikki.org-dictionary-Finnish.jsonl 
        255111 /dev/shm/kaikki.org-dictionary-Finnish.jsonl
    
        real 0m0.453s
        user 0m0.049s
        sys 0m0.404s
    
    Compared to the first read there is indeed a large speedup, from 2.2s down to under 0.5s. After the file had been loaded into cache from disk by the first `wc --lines`, however, the difference dropped to /dev/shm being about ~20% faster. Still significant, but not game-changingly so.

    I'll probably come back to this and run more tests with some of the more complex `jq` query stuff I have to see if we stay at that 20% mark, or if it gets faster or slower.

    • AdieuToLogic a day ago

      A couple things to consider when benchmarking RAM file I/O verses disk-based file system I/O.

      1 - Programs such as wc (or jq) do sequential reads, which benefit from file systems optimistically prefetching contents in order to reduce read delays.

      2 - Check to see if file access time tracking is enabled for the disk-based file system (see mount(8)). This may explain some of the 20% difference.

  • zajio1am a day ago

    Hard disagree. Disk buffer cache is too eager on writes (which makes sense for the usual case), so temporary data written to a filesystem are almost always written to the medium. With several GBs of temporary data it easily could fill up internal SSD write buffers and make whole system choppy.

    My use case is to use yt-dlp to download videos to ramfs, watch them and then delete. Before i switched to ramfs, the final pass of yt-dlp (where audio and video tracks are merged to one file) ordinarily caused the issue with choppy system.

  • chaps a day ago

    This isn't great advice because /tmp is not always mounted as tmpfs.

    I've used /dev/shm extensively for large datasets and it's consistently been a massive speed improvement. Not sure what you're talking about.

    • quotemstr a day ago

      > This isn't great advice because /tmp is not always mounted as tmpfs.

      Well, complain to whoever's mounting it wrong to fix it.

      • chaps a day ago

        Not sure your aggression is warranted, friend. Many distros over the years have had tmpfs mounted and many distros over the years haven't.

        Some hosts should have tmpfs mounted and some shouldn't. For those that don't, I can just /dev/shm. This isn't a "right" or "wrong" sorta thing.

  • lxgr a day ago

    > It's far too easy to clog up memory with forgotten files by defaulting to /dev/shm, for instance, and you potentially also take memory away from the rest of the system until the next reboot.

    Aren't both solved by swapping?

    Although I suppose on Linux, neither having swap, nor it being backed by dynamically growing files, is guaranteed.

  • ritcgab a day ago

    This only stands for modern storage devices with a controller. For SD cards that don't have wear leveling, writing to the same region will make it die faster.

amai 17 hours ago

Back to the 90s, when Amiga OS had a dynamically sized RAM disk by default and showed an icon for it in the GUI like for any other device. It even offered a persistant RAM drive.

https://grimore.org/amiga/rad

It seems the advantage of this has been mostly forgotten.

1vuio0pswjnm7 a day ago

For decades now I have been using RAM (mfs, tmpfs) as "disk", i.e., boot from USB, no internal HDD, no internal SSD.^1 Entire OS fits in memory. When compiling OS userland there is simply no comparison; disk is painfully slow. I am not a gamer. I use RAM as a filesystem and workspace. I just got another computer with 64GB RAM. I will get 96GB or more when price comes down.

1. I use removable, external drives for anything I want to save long-term. No "cloud" storage.

navbaker 17 hours ago

This may be an ignorant question, but does this also work for operations inside a container’s filesystem?

Jhsto a day ago

Speaking of RAM and disks, does anyone know what happens if you structure LVM volume such that there is a RAM based tmpfs as a front cache? Consistency issues aside, could it increase performance? Suppose I have an application that behaves such that it has very IO heavy write buffer of around 100GB with 10x or so NVMe backed storage for more rarely used data. Would you do something else? The main problem I have currently is that the NVMes overheat occasionally from high IOPS which adds a lot of latency variance.

  • theblazehen 21 hours ago

    Does the page cache not already do that? You can tweak the writeback delay etc

Waterluvian a day ago

An assumption I’ve been revisiting is if I really do need to be writing to disk all the time. I can’t remember the last time I actually had a crash or other event where I would have abruptly lost my work.

I’m wondering if I can completely hide away the detail where I can work exclusively in memory (even when I habitually save my code) and “reconcile” as some task I do before shutdown.

In fact, that doesn’t even feel necessary… I git push my day’s work a number of times. None of that needs a local disk. And 64GB of memory was surprisingly affordable.

  • roryirvine 10 hours ago

    Have a look at libeatmydata - https://github.com/stewartsmith/libeatmydata

    Things will still get written to disk eventually, it's just that fsync() returns instantly without actually doing anything. It's sometimes used in CI and similarly-ephemeral systems, and can produce a noticeable reduction in i/o.

    Be warned, though, that it has that name for a reason!

  • hiAndrewQuinn a day ago

    You might be interested in Tiny Core Linux [0], then, especially piCore. After the initial read from the persistent media, everything is in RAM, the entire filesystem. You are working exclusively in memory until and unless you run a specific command to save everything you care to save back to that media again.

    I have it running on a Raspberry Pi so that my already sparingly-used SD card's lifespan gets extended to, hopefully, several years. I have never seen the green writing LED light blink on without me specifically triggering it.

    I primarily use it as a cronslave [1]. It has ~50 separate cronjobs on it by now, all wheedling away at various things I want to make happen for free on a clock. But if you live out of a terminal and could spend your days happily inside tmux + vim or emacs -nw, there's nothing stopping you from just doing this. Feels a lot like driving stick shift.

    [0]: http://tinycorelinux.net/

    [1]: https://hiandrewquinn.github.io/til-site/posts/consider-the-...

    • johnmaguire a day ago

      I have a few systemd timers but not nearly 50! Any interesting use cases?

  • Jhsto a day ago

    I've been running my daily development laptop on 64GB of RAM for 1,5 years. My anecdotal experience is that no, you don't need persistent storage for most things. In fact, often it's in your way -- it clutters the system over time by causing configuration errors and weird undefined program states. When you can just reboot and all works again it's great. Never going back.

    • pm2222 a day ago

      64g ram here as well I mount chromium/firefox cache dir as tmpfs

  • wredcoll a day ago

    Yay, thin clients!

    • Waterluvian a day ago

      We did it! We’re back to where we came from!

slt2021 a day ago

I use jupyter notebooks for similar purpose, with the Python kernel's memory keeping the state I want for some random stuff, and notebook being a recipe how to reproduce the calculation/processing.

some of my kernels been running for weeks, as I come back and redo or rework some processing.

the neat thing about jupyter notebooks, is you can interleave python one-liners with bash one-liners and mix them as you wish.

pizza234 19 hours ago

Little trick for developers: put the database transaction log in /dev/shm (ensure that it's not too large), and some operations will be enormously faster.

  • msgodel 17 hours ago

    That kind of defeats the point of the thing.

ryoshu a day ago

I remember using a RAM disk on the IBM PCjr.

  • kvemkon a day ago

    And Stacker for D:

  • thedougd a day ago

    Slap a side car on there for another 512k RAM.

scriu a day ago

I like distros that can be run only in ram. I wish that i could run windows like that but you need a lot of ram.

pizlonator a day ago

The reason why this might be a bad idea is that /dev/shm is used for shm_open(3).

So in theory some program might pass a name to shm_open that collides with whatever you put in /dev/shm.

Unlikely but possible

  • layer8 a day ago

    How is that different from two unrelated programs using shm_open with conflicting file names? Such programs need to ensure unique names anyway.

hacker_homie a day ago

Just mount tmpfs where you have frequent writes.

hulitu 17 hours ago

> Save your disk, write files directly into RAM with /dev/shm

Even better: write them to /dev/null

quotemstr a day ago

This is what /tmp IS FOR. No need to be clever.

  • frollogaston a day ago

    /tmp is for temporary files, that's all. It's not about the storage medium.

  • 1970-01-01 a day ago

    I think Debian still uses disk space for files in /tmp. YMMV.

    • necheffa a day ago

      This will change starting with Trixie.

      Of course, I have always manually configured tmpfs for /tmp/ since Jessie as part of my post-install checklist.