Summary: | [boot] disk defragmentation on boot | ||
---|---|---|---|
Product: | Gentoo Linux | Reporter: | Jerome <jerome.bouat> |
Component: | [OLD] Core system | Assignee: | Gentoo Linux bug wranglers <bug-wranglers> |
Status: | VERIFIED CANTFIX | ||
Severity: | enhancement | ||
Priority: | High | ||
Version: | 2006.1 | ||
Hardware: | All | ||
OS: | Linux | ||
Whiteboard: | |||
Package list: | Runtime testing required: | --- |
Description
Jerome
2007-09-02 00:31:22 UTC
Yeah, feel free to defragment all you want. You'll need some non-broken tool first though, happy searching. why not using memory/swap for each fragmented ${file} like this: """ { { gzip --to-stdout ${file} > /dev/shm/unfrag.tmp } && mv ${file} ${file}.defrag-save && { gunzip --to-stdout /dev/shm/unfrag.tmp > ${file} } && rm ${file}.defrag-save } if [[ -e ${file}.defrag-save ]]; then mv ${file}.defrag-save ${file}; fi """ or """ { cp ${file} ${file}.defragmented && mv ${file} ${file}.defrag-save && mv ${file}.defragmented ${file} && rm ${file}.defrag-save } if [[ -e ${file}.defrag-save ]]; then mv ${file}.defrag-save ${file}; fi """ |