On Sat, May 02, 2020 at 10:12:08PM +0800, William Kenworthy wrote:
> I am afraid this is an ".. it depends" question.
>
Yes, I agree.
> If you work with large images or data sets, swap can be really handy.
> If you are doing a little programming, web browsing, reading email you
> will
I want to say that it really depends on this:
- What do you do on your system (what applications do you use, what DE, how
is your production ram-hungry, maybe it is some large application that
you're contributing on)
- How do you do things on your system (shutting down machine every day or
Michael wrote:
> On Saturday, 2 May 2020 10:54:02 BST Dale wrote:
>> Michael wrote:
>>> I'd be interested to know as a comparison if Nikos' and Dale's I/O
>>> unresponsiveness in swapping sees an improvement with the I/O scheduler
>>> for
>>> spinning drives set to bfq; e.g.:
>>>
>>> echo bfq >
I am afraid this is an ".. it depends" question.
If you work with large images or data sets, swap can be really handy.
If you are doing a little programming, web browsing, reading email you
will *probably* be ok, but why risk it?
I have a 32gb ram in a master server for an mfs filesystem - it
On Saturday, 2 May 2020 10:54:02 BST Dale wrote:
> Michael wrote:
> > I'd be interested to know as a comparison if Nikos' and Dale's I/O
> > unresponsiveness in swapping sees an improvement with the I/O scheduler
> > for
> > spinning drives set to bfq; e.g.:
> >
> > echo bfq >
Michael wrote:
> On Saturday, 2 May 2020 09:53:06 BST Dale wrote:
>> Wols Lists wrote:
>>> On 01/05/20 21:29, Dale wrote:
It gets really slow to respond when it uses swap but it beats crashing.
Just set swapiness to a low number. I think mine is set to 10.
Given the cheapness
On Saturday, 2 May 2020 09:53:06 BST Dale wrote:
> Wols Lists wrote:
> > On 01/05/20 21:29, Dale wrote:
> >> It gets really slow to respond when it uses swap but it beats crashing.
> >> Just set swapiness to a low number. I think mine is set to 10.
> >>
> >> Given the cheapness of hard drives,
Wols Lists wrote:
> On 01/05/20 21:29, Dale wrote:
>> It gets really slow to respond when it uses swap but it beats crashing.
>> Just set swapiness to a low number. I think mine is set to 10.
>>
>> Given the cheapness of hard drives, I'm not sure why having several
>> gigabytes of swap space is
On 05/01 04:50, Raphael MD wrote:
> Hello!
>
> Could I turn my Linux swap off.
> I have 32 GB of RAM memory, I suppose my system don’t need swap, because
> I’vea lot of RAM, is this true?
>
> Thanks
> --
> M.S. Raphael Mejias Dias
> Nuclear Engineer | Reactors
>
> Secure e-mail:
On Saturday, 2 May 2020 00:08:24 BST Raphael MD wrote:
> On Fri, 1 May 2020 at 18:49 J. Roeleveld wrote:
> > On 1 May 2020 21:50:02 CEST, Raphael MD wrote:
> > >Hello!
> > >
> > >Could I turn my Linux swap off.
> > >I have 32 GB of RAM memory, I suppose my system don’t need swap,
> > >because
>
On Saturday, 2 May 2020 00:09:47 BST Wols Lists wrote:
> On 01/05/20 21:29, Dale wrote:
> > It gets really slow to respond when it uses swap but it beats crashing.
> > Just set swapiness to a low number. I think mine is set to 10.
> >
> > Given the cheapness of hard drives, I'm not sure why
On 01/05/20 21:29, Dale wrote:
> It gets really slow to respond when it uses swap but it beats crashing.
> Just set swapiness to a low number. I think mine is set to 10.
>
> Given the cheapness of hard drives, I'm not sure why having several
> gigabytes of swap space is of much concern. I have
On Fri, 1 May 2020 at 18:49 J. Roeleveld wrote:
> On 1 May 2020 21:50:02 CEST, Raphael MD wrote:
> >Hello!
> >
> >Could I turn my Linux swap off.
> >I have 32 GB of RAM memory, I suppose my system don’t need swap,
> >because
> >I’vea lot of RAM, is this true?
> >
> >Thanks
>
> This question
On 1 May 2020 21:50:02 CEST, Raphael MD wrote:
>Hello!
>
>Could I turn my Linux swap off.
>I have 32 GB of RAM memory, I suppose my system don’t need swap,
>because
>I’vea lot of RAM, is this true?
>
>Thanks
This question keeps getting asked every time people go past some imaginary
large figure
Here is an article suggesting to have a _tiny_ bit of swap. They say
as recently as 2019 that Linux under memory pressure acts poorly with
_zero_ swap.
https://rachelbythebay.com/w/2019/08/08/swap/
- Matthew
On Fri, 1 May 2020 15:04:12 -0500, Canek Peláez Valdés wrote:
> I have 3 desktop machines with 32 GB of memory. In all 3 I still have
> swap (32 GB, I stopped using the "twice the amount of RAM" rule years
> ago). I don't think I have ever used one single byte from the swap; it
> always sits with
Raphael MD wrote:
> Hello!
>
> Could I turn my Linux swap off.
> I have 32 GB of RAM memory, I suppose my system don’t need swap,
> because I’vea lot of RAM, is this true?
>
> Thanks
> --
> M.S. Raphael Mejias Dias
> Nuclear Engineer | Reactors
>
> Secure e-mail:
On Fri, May 1, 2020, 14:50 Raphael MD wrote:
> Hello!
>
> Could I turn my Linux swap off.
> I have 32 GB of RAM memory, I suppose my system don’t need swap, because
> I’vea lot of RAM, is this true?
>
> Thanks
>
I have 3 desktop machines with 32 GB of memory. In all 3 I still have swap
(32 GB,
On 2020-05-01 14:50, Raphael MD wrote:
Could I turn my Linux swap off.
I have 32 GB of RAM memory, I suppose my system don’t need swap, because
I’vea lot of RAM, is this true?
As long as you're only running Linux on the machine, I would say yes,
you're safe to do that.
If you're going to
> Could I turn my Linux swap off.
> I have 32 GB of RAM memory, I suppose my system don’t need swap,
> because I’vea lot of RAM, is this true?
yes.
Hello!
Could I turn my Linux swap off.
I have 32 GB of RAM memory, I suppose my system don’t need swap, because
I’vea lot of RAM, is this true?
Thanks
--
M.S. Raphael Mejias Dias
Nuclear Engineer | Reactors
Secure e-mail: raphael.mejias.d...@protonmail.com
PGP Key for raph...@gmail.com:
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