Hello,
Thank you for the advice.
Another distribution I used allowed creation of any number of swap "files" in arbitrary fashion. And a "tuning parameter" to designate faster devices to be used before slower ones
So any number of any size zram swap and conventional swap partition and swap files could be established to the delight of the system administrator.
It sounds like a good idea to me the hibernate action should have capability to designate thou shalt hibernate here. And probe the place for having swap things active, and graciously evict swap from the place to allow hibernate things to move in.... Hopefully all that is needed is to read the manual for hibernate and type the proper configuration commands.
I don't know how grub really does it, but rationalize booting to first have bios in full control, next expand to grub system using files stored inside /boot directory, and at last transferring to operating system things on disk.
My problem system has an internal drive with two operating systems present. I have not looked but expect Debian installer to have put grub things into the unencrypted /boot directory on my main system drive instead of the encrypted /boot on the USB. On previous attempts to install on USB without altering main drive, I had to physically remove the main drive, make installation, then replace it. That was not Debian though.
Have a great day, I will mark this solved, reading the zram documentation.
Thank you for the advice.
Another distribution I used allowed creation of any number of swap "files" in arbitrary fashion. And a "tuning parameter" to designate faster devices to be used before slower ones
So any number of any size zram swap and conventional swap partition and swap files could be established to the delight of the system administrator.
It sounds like a good idea to me the hibernate action should have capability to designate thou shalt hibernate here. And probe the place for having swap things active, and graciously evict swap from the place to allow hibernate things to move in.... Hopefully all that is needed is to read the manual for hibernate and type the proper configuration commands.
I don't know how grub really does it, but rationalize booting to first have bios in full control, next expand to grub system using files stored inside /boot directory, and at last transferring to operating system things on disk.
My problem system has an internal drive with two operating systems present. I have not looked but expect Debian installer to have put grub things into the unencrypted /boot directory on my main system drive instead of the encrypted /boot on the USB. On previous attempts to install on USB without altering main drive, I had to physically remove the main drive, make installation, then replace it. That was not Debian though.
Have a great day, I will mark this solved, reading the zram documentation.
Statistics: Posted by Usedtoberich — 2025-02-22 13:36