I recently created a RAM /tmp
by adding this to /etc/fstab:
tmpfs /tmp tmpfs rw,nosuid,nodev,noatime 0 0
Everything works fine, and in theory the system runs faster now, but at boot time /var/log/syslog gets:
… tmp.mount: Directory /tmp to mount over is not empty, mounting anyway.
This situation seems inevitable, as there is never an opportunity to remove files from the filesystem version of /tmp.
The wasted space is trivial, but as a matter of interest, is there any easy way to clean out the junk hidden under the /tmp mountpoint?
This will mount your root partition in /mnt/root. Current mountpoints are not affected, so when looking in /mnt/root, you will see the original directory contents.
The 'easy' way is to boot from a Live USB/CD. Then, your
mount
won't have happened.