On Sun, 5 Nov 2000, Damien wrote: > i've been working on a stand alone music player for the last couple > of months. it's currently a bit loud (being based around an old p166 > with a very noisy hdd & powersupply fan. > > after reading another posting by someone else on how to quieten down > a computer, i finally got motivated to do so. but the first problem > that struck me was the hdd having to spin up all the time > > currently my music player plays a series of files off a cd. it also > has a screen blanking option which due to the hackish nature of this > program, does a system('tput clear') (as i don't want to use the > ncurses routines to do this) > > this call to tput is located on the hard disk and cached. yet after > playing a certain amount of music, this binary is swapped out, and > if accessed again, the hdd would have to spin down again. > > i remember reading somewhere that the sticky bit could be used to > instruct certain unixs to permanently cache a program. is this the > case with linux? if not, can anyone offer any alternative solutions?
Under DOS there was the possibility of treating some of your RAM like a disk (hence the name ramdisk). Not sure if Linux can do this, but if so, then just copy the binary to a ramdisk and run it from there. Just an idea, I don't know how to do it or even if it can be done. Damian Menscher -- --==## Grad. student & Sys. Admin. @ U. Illinois at Urbana-Champaign ##==-- --==## <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> www.uiuc.edu/~menscher/ Ofc:(217)333-0038 ##==-- --==## Physics Dept, 1110 W Green, Urbana IL 61801 Fax:(217)333-9819 ##==--