Info logo
Encyclopedia

  

RAM disk

Home :: Up
Google
www.fastload.org

RAM disk

A RAM disk is a segment of active computer memory, RAM, which is being used as if it were a disk drive. Access times are greatly improved and durability of data through power loss is completely absent. RAM disks are great places to store temporary data or to hold uncompressed programs for short periods.

A proper disk cache in the operating system will usually obviate the performance motivation for a RAM disk; a disk cache fulfills a similar role (fast access to data that isn'tionally stored on a disk) without the various penalties (data loss in the event of power loss, static partitioning, etc.). RAM disks are, however, indispensable in situations in which a physical disk isn't available.

Another way to use RAM to store files is the temporary filesystem[?]. The difference between temporary filesystem and a RAM disk is that the RAM disk (/dev/ram0 etc.) is fixed-sized and acts like a disk partition, whereas the temporary filesystem (/dev/shm; in Source Mage GNU/Linux[?] also /tmp) grows and shrinks to fit the files put on it.


Feel this could interest others? Point them here

This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License.
You may copy and modify it as long as the entire work (including additions) remains under this license.
To view or edit this article at Wikipedia, follow this link.