MD(4) | Device Drivers Manual | MD(4) |
NAME¶
md
— memory
disk
SYNOPSIS¶
device md
DESCRIPTION¶
The md
driver provides support for four
kinds of memory backed virtual disks:
malloc
- Backing store is allocated using malloc(9). Only one
malloc-bucket is used, which means that all
md
devices withmalloc
backing must share the malloc-per-bucket-quota. The exact size of this quota varies, in particular with the amount of RAM in the system. The exact value can be determined with vmstat(8). preload
- A file loaded by loader(8) with type
‘md_image’ is used for backing store. For backwards
compatibility the type ‘mfs_root’ is also recognized. If the
kernel is created with option
MD_ROOT
the first preloaded image found will become the root file system. vnode
- A regular file is used as backing store. This allows for mounting ISO images without the tedious detour over actual physical media.
swap
- Backing store is allocated from buffer memory. Pages get pushed out to the
swap when the system is under memory pressure, otherwise they stay in the
operating memory. Using
swap
backing is generally preferable overmalloc
backing.
For more information, please see mdconfig(8).
EXAMPLES¶
To create a kernel with a ramdisk or MD file system, your kernel config needs the following options:
options MD_ROOT # MD is a potential root device options MD_ROOT_SIZE=8192 # 8MB ram disk makeoptions MFS_IMAGE=/h/foo/ARM-MD options ROOTDEVNAME=\"ufs:md0\"
The image in /h/foo/ARM-MD will be loaded as the initial image each boot. To create the image to use, please follow the steps to create a file-backed disk found in the mdconfig(8) man page. Other tools will also create these images, such as NanoBSD.
SEE ALSO¶
gpart(8), loader(8), mdconfig(8), mdmfs(8), newfs(8), vmstat(8)
HISTORY¶
The md
driver first appeared in
FreeBSD 4.0 as a cleaner replacement for the MFS
functionality previously used in PicoBSD and in the
FreeBSD installation process.
The md
driver did a hostile takeover of
the vn(4) driver in FreeBSD
5.0.
AUTHORS¶
The md
driver was written by
Poul-Henning Kamp
<phk@FreeBSD.org>.
October 30, 2007 | Debian |