ramdiskadm man page on SunOS

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ramdiskadm(1M)		System Administration Commands		ramdiskadm(1M)

NAME
       ramdiskadm - administer ramdisk pseudo device

SYNOPSIS
       /usr/sbin/ramdiskadm -a name size [g | m | k | b]

       /usr/sbin/ramdiskadm -d name

       /usr/sbin/ramdiskadm

DESCRIPTION
       The ramdiskadm command administers ramdisk(7D), the ramdisk driver. Use
       ramdiskadm to create a new named ramdisk	 device,  delete  an  existing
       named ramdisk, or list information about existing ramdisks.

       Ramdisks created using ramdiskadm are not persistent across reboots.

OPTIONS
       The following options are supported:

       -a name size

	   Create  a  ramdisk  named  name  of size size and its corresponding
	   block and character device nodes.

	   name must be composed only of  the  characters  a-z,	 A-Z,  0-9,  _
	   (underbar), and - (hyphen), but it must not begin with a hyphen. It
	   must be no more than 32 characters  long.  Ramdisk  names  must  be
	   unique.

	   The	size  can  be  a  decimal number, or, when prefixed with 0x, a
	   hexadecimal number, and can specify the size in bytes (no  suffix),
	   512-byte blocks (suffix b), kilobytes (suffix k), megabytes (suffix
	   m) or gigabytes (suffix g). The size of the ramdisk	actually  cre‐
	   ated might be larger than that specified, depending on the hardware
	   implementation.

	   If the named ramdisk is successfully created, its block device path
	   is printed on standard out.

       -d name

	   Delete  an existing ramdisk of the name name. This command succeeds
	   only when the named ramdisk is not open. The associated  memory  is
	   freed and the device nodes are removed.

	   You	can  delete  only ramdisks created using ramdiskadm. It is not
	   possible to delete a ramdisk	 that  was  created  during  the  boot
	   process.

       Without	options,  ramdiskadm  lists any existing ramdisks, their sizes
       (in decimal), and whether they can be removed by	 ramdiskadm  (see  the
       description of the -d option, above).

EXAMPLES
       Example 1: Creating a 2MB Ramdisk Named mydisk

       # ramdiskadm -a mydisk 2m
       /dev/ramdisk/mydisk

       Example 2: Listing All Ramdisks

       # ramdiskadm
       Block Device		      Size  Removable
       /dev/ramdisk/miniroot	 134217728    No
       /dev/ramdisk/certfs	   1048576    No
       /dev/ramdisk/mydisk	   2097152    Yes

EXIT STATUS
       ramdiskadm returns the following exit values:

       0

	   Successful completion.

       >0

	   An error occurred.

ATTRIBUTES
       See attributes(5) for descriptions of the following attributes:

       ┌─────────────────────────────┬─────────────────────────────┐
       │      ATTRIBUTE TYPE	     │	    ATTRIBUTE VALUE	   │
       ├─────────────────────────────┼─────────────────────────────┤
       │Availability		     │SUNWcsr			   │
       ├─────────────────────────────┼─────────────────────────────┤
       │Interface Stability	     │Evolving			   │
       └─────────────────────────────┴─────────────────────────────┘

SEE ALSO
       attributes(5), ramdisk(7D)

NOTES
       The  abilities  of ramdiskadm and the privilege level of the person who
       uses the utility are controlled by the permissions of  /dev/ramdiskctl.
       Read access allows query operations, for example, listing device infor‐
       mation. Write access is required to do any  state-changing  operations,
       for example, creating or deleting ramdisks.

       As  shipped,  /dev/ramdiskctl  is owned by root, in group sys, and mode
       0644, so all users can do query operations but only  root  can  perform
       state-changing  operations.  An	administrator can give write access to
       non-privileged users, allowing them to add or delete ramdisks. However,
       granting such ability entails considerable risk; such privileges should
       be given only to a trusted group.

SunOS 5.10			  25 Mar 2003			ramdiskadm(1M)
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