I'm no longer sure what a Volatile RAMdisk is.
For me it's a disk that gets distroyed when rebooting.
But still when I use the image function I can select Volatile RAMdisk.
Doesn't an image make a RAMdisk non volatile?
Volatile RAMdisk Topic is solved
Re: Volatile RAMdisk
Yes, it does make it non-volatile. At least in the regard that the same image (as it was last saved) is re-loaded at boot time. And changes to the disk that you *don't* save (either automatically or manually) are discarded.
I was just able to successfully create a 1GB Ramdisk with a backing image on my C: drive, with the Volatile setting also turned on. Not sure why you can't.
I was just able to successfully create a 1GB Ramdisk with a backing image on my C: drive, with the Volatile setting also turned on. Not sure why you can't.
Re: Volatile RAMdisk
I CAN create a RAMdisk with backing image and volatile on. I can do exactly what I want. So no big issues at all.
I just find the terminology conflicting.
The way I see it, the volatile option can be removed from the interface. It serves no purpose.
The image option does that already.
Sure, you are 100% right that unsaved data gets destroyed. But even then the volatile option is useless because an image never protects against crashes. It would only protect if it saves the image every millisecond, but that defeats the whole RAMdisk idea.
Maybe I'm overlooking some sound logic the Romex team can explain.
I just find the terminology conflicting.
The way I see it, the volatile option can be removed from the interface. It serves no purpose.
The image option does that already.
Sure, you are 100% right that unsaved data gets destroyed. But even then the volatile option is useless because an image never protects against crashes. It would only protect if it saves the image every millisecond, but that defeats the whole RAMdisk idea.
Maybe I'm overlooking some sound logic the Romex team can explain.
Re: Volatile RAMdisk
Volatile disk here means that the virtual disk will not be created/present after Windows reboot/shutdown. It's a one-shot disk.
Re: Volatile RAMdisk
Not even when an image was set?
If so, what's the use of the image?
If so, what's the use of the image?
Re: Volatile RAMdisk
Volatile is set to the disk itself, while the imaging is for disk contents. They are not mutually exclusive.
Here is the use case of using both options together. Some users may just want a temporary ramdisk for current Windows session only and don't want it after reboot, and they want the ramdisk loading an saved image file after creation. This is useful when you have saved some imaging files to serve different purposes.
Here is the use case of using both options together. Some users may just want a temporary ramdisk for current Windows session only and don't want it after reboot, and they want the ramdisk loading an saved image file after creation. This is useful when you have saved some imaging files to serve different purposes.
Re: Volatile RAMdisk
ok, now I see. It's more like a backup I could use, for example, years later.
Thanks for the answers!
Thanks for the answers!
Re: Volatile RAMdisk
You're welcome!
Re: Volatile RAMdisk
Yep - it keeps the contents as it was last saved, just like a backup. If you don't force a manual save, you can continue to use it in the state it was in when last written to.