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Ubuntu 18.04 Minimal Spin Down To ~30MB Compressed / ~81MB On Disk

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  • caligula
    replied
    Not that impressive compared to Alpine Linux.

    Leave a comment:


  • Steffo
    replied
    Originally posted by GraysonPeddie View Post
    30MB for a minimal CD? Very impressive! And up to 84MB for disk with no man pages and documentation! Why would anyone want to have that small of a minimal CD for container/Docker? OpenStack? Kubernetes? Or maybe have UniFi Controller or Home Assistant (for automating home automation devices such as Hue and Venstar Thermostat) in containers? Space is cheap and it would make sense to get 128GB M.2 for about $80 and install it in a Mini-ITX motherboard, assuming that the SFF motherboards should have enough room for just a single M.2 slot.
    For virtual machines or embedded stuff.
    My company is a medical device manufacturer. We don't deliver any lib or program which we don't need. This has also something to do with security.

    Leave a comment:


  • starshipeleven
    replied
    Originally posted by GraysonPeddie View Post
    30MB for a minimal CD? Very impressive! And up to 84MB for disk with no man pages and documentation! Why would anyone want to have that small of a minimal CD for container/Docker? OpenStack? Kubernetes? Or maybe have UniFi Controller or Home Assistant (for automating home automation devices such as Hue and Venstar Thermostat) in containers? Space is cheap and it would make sense to get 128GB M.2 for about $80 and install it in a Mini-ITX motherboard, assuming that the SFF motherboards should have enough room for just a single M.2 slot.
    It's for VM or embedded usage. Embedded devices very rarely have more than 1 GB of internal flash unless they are using Android or similar.

    And for "embedded" I mean devices that cost less than 200$ and whose internal storage does not need any performance at all as it will live in RAM and not see much writes.

    VMs and containers are basically "fat applications", in the sense that when you need more performance you "power up" more VMs and containers, while when you don't need them you "power off" them. And this allows to scale fast and answer to peaks in demand, and for cloud providers to maximize the utilization of the servers (i.e. maximize the $$$ they get from their clients while reducing the costs from having many servers that sit idle doing nothing)

    In neither case you want/need documentation or any frills, and space is NOT cheap.

    Leave a comment:


  • Jumbotron
    replied
    I know next to nothing about container architecture and performance...but I could imagine you wanting such a small footprint when you scale each instance into the hundreds if not thousands of containers. Definitely getting it that small makes it good for embedded stuff. Think Snaps installs on embedded platforms. And when the Linux Kernel is a Snap as well you have a full stack from kernel on up to be used as an embedded platform.

    Leave a comment:


  • GraysonPeddie
    replied
    30MB for a minimal CD? Very impressive! And up to 84MB for disk with no man pages and documentation! Why would anyone want to have that small of a minimal CD for container/Docker? OpenStack? Kubernetes? Or maybe have UniFi Controller or Home Assistant (for automating home automation devices such as Hue and Venstar Thermostat) in containers? Space is cheap and it would make sense to get 128GB M.2 for about $80 and install it in a Mini-ITX motherboard, assuming that the SFF motherboards should have enough room for just a single M.2 slot.

    Leave a comment:


  • Ubuntu 18.04 Minimal Spin Down To ~30MB Compressed / ~81MB On Disk

    Phoronix: Ubuntu 18.04 Minimal Spin Down To ~30MB Compressed / ~81MB On Disk

    For those using Ubuntu Minimal images for containers/Docker, assembling your own base distribution, setting up an embedded Linux environment, or related use-cases, the minimal images for the upcoming Ubuntu 18.04 LTS release will be even smaller...

    Phoronix, Linux Hardware Reviews, Linux hardware benchmarks, Linux server benchmarks, Linux benchmarking, Desktop Linux, Linux performance, Open Source graphics, Linux How To, Ubuntu benchmarks, Ubuntu hardware, Phoronix Test Suite
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