On Thu, Jul 12, 2007 at 10:57:04PM -0700, [email protected] wrote:
> On Fri, 13 Jul 2007, Joseph Fannin wrote:
>
> the only justification I have heard for why the hibernate image must be
> written to the swap partition is backwards compatibility (i.e., we've
> always done it that way)
>
> if you are going to reserve disk space for hibernation, what is so bad
> about useing a normal partition?
>
You have to either repartition when you upgrade your memory, or
waste a bunch of disk space with a partition as large as you think
your RAM might ever expand to.
Swap/hibernate files can be created, deleted, and resized without
partitioning.
Also: not all platforms support a large number of partitions.
It's not academic -- Intel Macintoshes are limited to four, with two
taken by Mac OS. Add Windows and a Linux /, and you're out --
there's no room for a swap file.
--
Joseph Fannin
[email protected]
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