I’m exploring ways to shave a few seconds off of my boot time, and I came across a post that stated, “my initrd is pretty small–doesn’t really load much–and Arch also defaults to using zstd which is also faster to decompress versus gzip.”

What compression does Pop! use for initrd and the kernel? When I run ls -al /boot, I see files such as 14M vmlinuz-6.4.6-76060406-generic and 119M initrd.img-6.4.6-76060406-generic. Are these compressed?

Lastly, is there a way to choose the compression of these boot files without a custom kernel build? Or is what I’m trying to do “off the beaten path” and going to lead to “you have to compile your own kernel from here on out”?

      • canadaduaneOP
        link
        fedilink
        English
        arrow-up
        1
        ·
        1 year ago

        How would I check? Like this?

        $ zstd -l vmlinuz-6.4.6-76060406-generic 
        Frames  Skips  Compressed  Uncompressed  Ratio  Check  Filename
        File "vmlinuz-6.4.6-76060406-generic" not compressed by zstd 
        
          • canadaduaneOP
            link
            fedilink
            English
            arrow-up
            1
            ·
            1 year ago

            Wow, this told me much more than I expected; however, I’m still not sure if it’s zstd:

            /boot/vmlinuz-6.4.6-76060406-generic: Linux kernel x86 boot executable bzImage, version 6.4.6-76060406-generic ([email protected]) #202307241739~1694621917~22.04~ac5e1a8 SMP PREEMPT_DYNAMIC Wed S, RO-rootFS, swap_dev 0XD, Normal VGA
            

            bzImage sounds like…bzip2, maybe?

            • TOR-anon1@lemmy.world
              link
              fedilink
              English
              arrow-up
              1
              ·
              1 year ago

              No. BZ stands for Big zImange. The kernel is compressed.

              To see what compression was used:

              zgrep CONFIG_KERNEL_ /proc/config.gz
              

              Try file on the initrd instead.

              • canadaduaneOP
                link
                fedilink
                English
                arrow-up
                1
                ·
                1 year ago

                Ah, thanks! Slightly different location, but basically the same. Here we go:

                $ grep CONFIG_KERNEL_ /boot/config-6.4.6-76060406-generic
                # CONFIG_KERNEL_GZIP is not set
                # CONFIG_KERNEL_BZIP2 is not set
                # CONFIG_KERNEL_LZMA is not set
                # CONFIG_KERNEL_XZ is not set
                # CONFIG_KERNEL_LZO is not set
                # CONFIG_KERNEL_LZ4 is not set
                CONFIG_KERNEL_ZSTD=y
                

                So the kernel is “zstd” compressed.

                OTOH, I’m not sure if this means anything about initrd (ASCII cpio archive??)

                $ file /boot/initrd.img-6.4.6-76060406-generic 
                /boot/initrd.img-6.4.6-76060406-generic: ASCII cpio archive (SVR4 with no CRC)