[EMAIL PROTECTED] schrieb:
The average values here are not as useful as individual values, as they tend to hide the extremes.
Yes, but I didn't wanted to paste all values. That would have been a lot of output and we are off topic already. :)
so I see on one day you had an average 112k of swap / second. This is higher than you'd want. My average for example is .024, and never gets above 4.
This is quite interesting. You already saw out of my average values that it was higher than as you are used to see it on your machine.
I will search the web for more numbers to compare mine with. If anyone knows places where this topic is being discussed or treated, please let me know.
Again, you need to examine the numbers.
Will try to graph it, so I get better visualization and a "feeling" for it.
Understood - nobody ever wants downtime. Yet, a 30 minute scheduled downtime for a RAM upgrade is far more tolerable and safer than mucking with various daemon configurations on a production system that you don't understand well, right? And in the end, you have a stronger work horse.
You are right. Thanks a lot for your help. Kind regards Timo ------------------------------------------------------- This SF.Net email is sponsored by: Power Architecture Resource Center: Free content, downloads, discussions, and more. http://solutions.newsforge.com/ibmarch.tmpl _______________________________________________ AMaViS-user mailing list [email protected] https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/amavis-user AMaViS-FAQ:http://www.amavis.org/amavis-faq.php3 AMaViS-HowTos:http://www.amavis.org/howto/
