On 4/17/20 1:07 AM, Patrick O'Callaghan wrote:
On Thu, 2020-04-16 at 17:12 -0700, Samuel Sieb wrote:
On 4/13/20 9:51 AM, Sreyan Chakravarty wrote:
I have just configured a 8GB swap file on my Fedora 31 laptop. But it
seems that SELinux is blocking access to the swap file.
Can you hibernate to a swap *file*? I thought it had to be a partition.
How would you set up the resume line for that?
It has to be a partition. A file can be on any kind of filesystem, so
how would the resume function know what to do?
From systemd-hibernate-resume(8):
systemd-hibernate-resume@.service initiates the resume from hibernation. It is instantiated with the device to resume from as the template argument.
systemd-hibernate-resume only supports the in-kernel hibernation implementation, known as swsusp[1]. Internally, it works by writing the major:minor of specified device node to /sys/power/resume.
That's why I'm confused about the original question. He made a swap
file for hibernating and it's not working because of an selinux issue.
But even if that is resolved, it's still not going to work.
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