On 8/7/09, Seewer Philippe <philippe.seewer@xxxxxx> wrote: > Scott James Remnant wrote: > [snip] >>>> Slimming the initramfs right down to the essentials reduces the boot >>>> time by over a second! Paradoxically, this means that the driver can be >>>> loaded in the real system at roughly the same time point as it would be >>>> loaded in a bloated initramfs. >>> well afair the intel fast boot doesn't use initramfs in the fast path >>> at all >>> >> Our fast boot does use an initramfs. > > This is a bit offtopic: Do you have any more info about intel fast boot? > I use an intel atom board at home which supposedly has intel fast boot, > but I haven't found any info on how to make use of that. > > Thanks, > Philippe Linux "fast boot" is purely a software feature. The most significant hardware feature is a BIOS which doesn't take too long before it loads the kernel. Possibly the marketing people have confused you with their use of the word "supports". The closest match to "supports intel fast boot" would be "supported by Moblin". Moblin is the optimized distribution initially developed by Intel. One of the optimizations was to limit the supported hardware configurations. Intel Atom boards were obviously favoured ;-). Cynicism aside, it's well worth a look. Alan -- To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe initramfs" in the body of a message to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html