X-Git-Url: http://git.liburcu.org/?a=blobdiff_plain;f=2.13%2Flttng-docs-2.13.txt;h=d69aaabe76957cd5bf36ba3ef3abbdb89c960a59;hb=b67a670c19ecc56442d9e494f05c537515325e75;hp=ec6c70066f327fc8290fb3d51d7c11cfef7c770b;hpb=f9167c82ecaf11ed038f8dfd0a8b64c4a01ffa01;p=lttng-docs.git diff --git a/2.13/lttng-docs-2.13.txt b/2.13/lttng-docs-2.13.txt index ec6c700..d69aaab 100644 --- a/2.13/lttng-docs-2.13.txt +++ b/2.13/lttng-docs-2.13.txt @@ -8004,9 +8004,8 @@ memory can store data structures in RAM and retrieve them after a reboot, without flushing to typical _storage_. Linux supports NVRAM file systems thanks to either -http://pramfs.sourceforge.net/[PRAMFS] or https://www.kernel.org/doc/Documentation/filesystems/dax.txt[DAX]{nbsp}+{nbsp}http://lkml.iu.edu/hypermail/linux/kernel/1504.1/03463.html[pmem] -(requires Linux{nbsp}4.1+). +(requires Linux{nbsp}4.1+) or http://pramfs.sourceforge.net/[PRAMFS] (requires Linux{nbsp}<{nbsp}4). This section doesn't describe how to operate such file systems; we assume that you have a working persistent memory file system.