is half of the number of your physical RAM pages, or (on a
machine with highmem) the number of lowmem RAM pages,
whichever is the lower.
-noswap Disables swap. Remounts must respect the original settings.
- By default swap is enabled.
========= ============================================================
These parameters accept a suffix k, m or g for kilo, mega and giga and
use up all the memory on the machine; but enhances the scalability of
that instance in a system with many CPUs making intensive use of it.
+tmpfs blocks may be swapped out, when there is a shortage of memory.
+tmpfs has a mount option to disable its use of swap:
+
+====== ===========================================================
+noswap Disables swap. Remounts must respect the original settings.
+ By default swap is enabled.
+====== ===========================================================
+
tmpfs also supports Transparent Huge Pages which requires a kernel
configured with CONFIG_TRANSPARENT_HUGEPAGE and with huge supported for
your system (has_transparent_hugepage(), which is architecture specific).
The mount options for this are:
-====== ============================================================
-huge=0 never: disables huge pages for the mount
-huge=1 always: enables huge pages for the mount
-huge=2 within_size: only allocate huge pages if the page will be
- fully within i_size, also respect fadvise()/madvise() hints.
-huge=3 advise: only allocate huge pages if requested with
- fadvise()/madvise()
-====== ============================================================
-
-There is a sysfs file which you can also use to control system wide THP
-configuration for all tmpfs mounts, the file is:
-
-/sys/kernel/mm/transparent_hugepage/shmem_enabled
-
-This sysfs file is placed on top of THP sysfs directory and so is registered
-by THP code. It is however only used to control all tmpfs mounts with one
-single knob. Since it controls all tmpfs mounts it should only be used either
-for emergency or testing purposes. The values you can set for shmem_enabled are:
-
-== ============================================================
--1 deny: disables huge on shm_mnt and all mounts, for
- emergency use
--2 force: enables huge on shm_mnt and all mounts, w/o needing
- option, for testing
-== ============================================================
+================ ==============================================================
+huge=never Do not allocate huge pages. This is the default.
+huge=always Attempt to allocate huge page every time a new page is needed.
+huge=within_size Only allocate huge page if it will be fully within i_size.
+ Also respect madvise(2) hints.
+huge=advise Only allocate huge page if requested with madvise(2).
+================ ==============================================================
+
+See also Documentation/admin-guide/mm/transhuge.rst, which describes the
+sysfs file /sys/kernel/mm/transparent_hugepage/shmem_enabled: which can
+be used to deny huge pages on all tmpfs mounts in an emergency, or to
+force huge pages on all tmpfs mounts for testing.
tmpfs has a mount option to set the NUMA memory allocation policy for
all files in that instance (if CONFIG_NUMA is enabled) - which can be