Editing Rootfs
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- | Rootfs is the filesystem that the root directory (also called ‘<code>/</code>’) is on. The [[Nokia N900|N900]] has a 256 MB OneNAND chip that is used for the rootfs, bootloader and kernel, together with a (slower) 32 GB eMMC flash that is partitioned as 768 MB swap space, 2 GB <code>/home</code> and 27 GB <code> | + | Rootfs is the filesystem that the root directory (also called ‘<code>/</code>’) is on. The [[Nokia N900|N900]] has a 256 MB OneNAND chip that is used for the rootfs, bootloader and kernel, together with a (slower) 32 GB eMMC flash that is partitioned as 768 MB swap space, 2 GB <code>/home</code> and 27 GB <code>/home/user/MyDocs</code>. |
Every application installs a bit of itself to the rootfs, some more than others, and the rest of it they install on other parts of the device. Applications that have been designed to install as little of themselves as they can are referred to as "optified". | Every application installs a bit of itself to the rootfs, some more than others, and the rest of it they install on other parts of the device. Applications that have been designed to install as little of themselves as they can are referred to as "optified". |
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