Why don't I have a resume
file in the path: /etc/initramfs-tools/conf.d
?
Shouldn't there be in this path?
I'm using Ubuntu 20.04 and while installation I created a swap partition (instead of swapfile) that is regularly in use, in fact the output of swapon -s
is:
Filename Type Size Used Priority
/dev/sdb5 partition 9765884 0 -2
N.B.: Actually I'm looking for this file because I want to migrate from swap partition to a swapfile, and for this purpose I found some simple instructions which, at the end, also suggest to edit this "resume" file (that I don't have)!
Swap Partition to Swapfile with Hibernation in 20.04:
Increase swapfile size to match RAM size up to 8GB.
Check the swap that is in use:
sudo swapon -s
If swap partition(s) found:
sudo swapoff -a
sudo nano -Bw /etc/fstab
In
/etc/fstab
add "# " before the UUID of the swap partition(s):# UUID=XXXXXXXX-XXXX-XXXX-XXXX-XXXXXXXXXXXX none swap sw 0 0
Add a line for the swapfile, if one does not exist:
swapfile none swap sw 0 0
Create the swap file:
sudo fallocate -l XG /swapfile
*Where X is the swapfile size in GB
Reboot:
sudo reboot
Setup Hibernation (Optional)
Add resume location and offset to grub.cfg:
/etc/default/grub
:GRUB_CMDLINE_LINUX_DEFAULT="quiet splash resume=UUID=XXXXXXXX-XXXX-XXXX-XXXX-XXXXXXXXXXXX resume_offset=XXXXX"
Use UUID from root.
Use offset from
sudo filefrag -v /swapfile |grep " 0:"| awk '{print $4}'
Update GRUB
sudo update-grub
Test hibernation
sudo systemctl hibernate
A hibernate button can be added using gnome extensions.
*There is a slight possibility of getting holes in a swapfile when creating it with fallocate.
/var/log/syslog
can be searched for the phraseswapon: swapfile has holes
to ensure there will be no data loss.A swapfile can alternatively be created using
dd
:sudo dd if=/dev/zero of=/swapfile bs=1G count=8
Caution: An error when using dd may overwrite your HDDYou'll have one only after you hibernate your system (instead of shutting down), otherwise you don't have one.
Not having one is normal (if you watch the boot messages, you'll note an error with it not being found which leads to the normal cold boot). The file's presence tells the system it was hibernated and a resume is required (instead of cold-boot).
It doesn't relate to the swapfile/swap-partition change
https://wiki.ubuntu.com/DebuggingKernelHibernate