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This suggested edit was approved and applied to the post about 1 year ago by Quasímodo‭.

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Can I make a compressed RAM drive and externally prepare a (pre-)compressed file to copy onto it?
  • I don't know what these things are called exactly in the Linux world.
  • But there is the concept of a drive in RAM, to write files onto and read them like it was any disk drive.
  • There is also the concept of an intrinsically compressed drive.
  • (Effective) compression takes time, of course. So I also wonder if there is such a thing to pre-compress a file externally to the system that has the compressed drive, and move it, e.g. coming from a network connection, onto the RAM drive without it taking time to compress.
  • (Though I guess that compressed drives favor speed over level of compression, to be feasible at all?)
  • For the curious (and maybe because someone might tell me that I should ask a different question as this scenario drawn here is not a good way to do what I want):
  • The aim of this is:
  • I have a machine with very limited storage (eMMC), and it is supposed to write a trimmed-down Linux image onto another machine it is connected to, and there is already a readily available program, geared towards doing that to the even smaller target machine.
  • That program takes a typical image file.
  • I cannot hold the image on the storage of the "pushing" machine.
  • But what if I made a RAM drive and kept a compressed Linux image in it, loaded from external connection for this event, and pointed the mentioned available flashing program to that file.
  • The Linux image would not fit, uncompressed, in the RAM - but compressed, it probably will, at least with usual zip settings, which are, I guess, better than a drive for "live" stuff.
  • I could write a modified flasher program and do decompression myself.
  • But if the same thing actually was only a few standard Linux commands away from working, why do it myself. (and also, leanring new things that Linux can do, if it can do them, is alsways good).
  • I don't know what these things are called exactly in the Linux world.
  • But there is the concept of a drive in RAM, to write files onto and read them like it was any disk drive.
  • There is also the concept of an intrinsically compressed drive.
  • (Effective) compression takes time, of course. So I also wonder if there is such a thing to pre-compress a file externally to the system that has the compressed drive, and move it, e.g. coming from a network connection, onto the RAM drive without it taking time to compress.
  • (Though I guess that compressed drives favor speed over level of compression, to be feasible at all?)
  • For the curious (and maybe because someone might tell me that I should ask a different question as this scenario drawn here is not a good way to do what I want):
  • The aim of this is:
  • I have a machine with very limited storage (eMMC), and it is supposed to write a trimmed-down Linux image onto another machine it is connected to, and there is already a readily available program, geared towards doing that to the even smaller target machine.
  • That program takes a typical image file.
  • I cannot hold the image on the storage of the "pushing" machine.
  • But what if I made a RAM drive and kept a compressed Linux image in it, loaded from external connection for this event, and pointed the mentioned available flashing program to that file.
  • The Linux image would not fit, uncompressed, in the RAM - but compressed, it probably will, at least with usual zip settings, which are, I guess, better than a drive for "live" stuff.
  • I could write a modified flasher program and do decompression myself.
  • But if the same thing actually was only a few standard Linux commands away from working, why do it myself. (And also, leanring new things that Linux can do, if it can do them, is alsways good).

Suggested about 1 year ago by tripleee‭