swapctl man page on OpenBSD

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SWAPCTL(8)		OpenBSD System Manager's Manual		    SWAPCTL(8)

NAME
     swapctl, swapon - system swap management tool

SYNOPSIS
     swapctl -A [-p priority] [-t blk|noblk]
     swapctl -a [-p priority] path
     swapctl -c -p priority path
     swapctl -d path
     swapctl -l | -s [-k]
     swapon -a | path

DESCRIPTION
     The swapctl program adds, removes, lists and prioritizes swap devices and
     files for the system.  The swapon program acts the same as swapctl -a,
     except if swapon itself is called with -a, in which case it acts as
     swapctl -A.

     Note: The initial swap device (root disk, partition b) is handled
     automatically by the kernel and does not need to be added to /etc/fstab
     or added via swapctl.  It will show up as "swap_device" in the output
     displayed with the -l flag.

     The options are as follows:

     -A	     This option causes swapctl to read the /etc/fstab file for
	     devices and files with an ``sw'' type, and adds all these entries
	     as swap devices.  If no swap devices are configured, swapctl will
	     exit with an error code.

     -a	     The -a option requires that a path also be in the argument list.
	     The path is added to the kernel's list of swap devices using the
	     swapctl(2) system call.  When using the swapon form of this
	     command, the -a option is treated the same as the -A option, for
	     backwards compatibility.

     -c	     The -c option changes the priority of the listed swap device or
	     file.

     -d path
	     The -d option removes the listed path from the kernel's list of
	     swap devices or files.

     -k	     The -k option uses 1024 byte blocks instead of the default 512
	     byte.

     -l	     The -l option lists the current swap devices and files, and their
	     usage statistics.

     -p priority
	     The -p option sets the priority of swap devices or files to the
	     priority argument.

     -s	     The -s option displays a single line summary of current swap
	     statistics.

     -t blk|noblk
	     This flag modifies the function of the -A option.	The -t option
	     allows the type of device to add to be specified.	An argument of
	     blk causes all block devices in /etc/fstab to be added.  An
	     argument of noblk causes all non-block devices in /etc/fstab to
	     be added.	This option is useful in early system startup, where
	     swapping may be needed before all file systems are available,
	     such as during disk checks of large file systems.

SWAP OPTIONS
     When parsing the /etc/fstab file for swap devices, lines such as the
     following specify additional swap devices:

	   /dev/sd1b none swap sw 0 0

     Additional flags include:

     priority=N	     Swap devices and files may be assigned different
		     priorities, to allow faster resources to be used first.
		     Swap devices at the same priority are used in a round-
		     robin fashion until there is no more space available at
		     this priority, when the next priority level will be used.
		     The default priority is 0, the highest.  This value can
		     be any valid integer, with higher values receiving less
		     priority.
     nfsmntpt=/path  This option is useful for swapping to NFS files.  It
		     specifies the local mount point to mount an NFS
		     filesystem.  Typically, once this mount has succeeded,
		     the file to be used for swapping on will be available
		     under this point mount.  For example:

		     server:/export/swap/client none swap sw,nfsmntpt=/swap

EXIT STATUS
     The swapctl utility exits 0 on success, and >0 if an error occurs.

SEE ALSO
     swapctl(2), vnd(4), fstab(5), mount_nfs(8), mount_vnd(8)

HISTORY
     The swapctl program was originally developed in NetBSD 1.3.  It was
     ported to OpenBSD 2.6 by Tobias Weingartner.  The original swapon
     program, provided for backwards compatibility, appeared in 4.0BSD.

AUTHORS
     The swapctl program was written by Matthew R. Green <mrg@eterna.com.au>.

BUGS
     Local and remote swap files cannot be configured until the file systems
     they reside on are mounted read/write.  The system startup scripts need
     to fsck(8) all local file systems before this can happen.	This process
     requires substantial amounts of memory on some systems.  If one
     configures no local block swap devices on a machine that has local file
     systems to check and rely only on swap files, the machine will have no
     swap space at all during system fsck(8) and may run out of real memory,
     causing fsck to abnormally exit and startup scripts to fail.

OpenBSD 4.9		       September 3, 2010		   OpenBSD 4.9
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