I always thought swap space should 1 1/2 times the amount of physical memory.
If you start thrashing swap space you should buy more physical memory and fix your programs that might have a memory leak or not release memory properly after completing. James ________________________________ From: Patrick O'Callaghan <[email protected]> To: "Community assistance, encouragement, and advice for using Fedora." <[email protected]> Sent: Thursday, January 22, 2009 7:43:17 AM Subject: Re: Ideal Swap Partition Size On Thu, Jan 22, 2009 at 12:05 PM, Tim <[email protected]> wrote: > Tim: >>> It seems strange to think that a system will swap just because >>> there's swap space available. Surely, it's only going to swap when >>> it needs to, and you'd be faced with operating and swapping, or being >>> unable to swap and unable to operate once you reach that stage. > > Patrick O'Callaghan: >> True, but in some systems -- especially those with realtime >> requirements -- it can actually be preferable to fail than to go slow >> (due to what we oldtimers call "thrashing"). > > But it wouldn't be case of your application running or not, it'd be a > case of something else dying off, as some additional task was started up > at an inopportune moment. A Linux OS isn't just one running process, > even if you only run one application on the box. Er, I think I knew that :-) The scenarios in which dying is better than swapping are definitely not common, but typically a real-time system will be configured to run only certain processes anyway, i.e. it's not a general-purpose system that just happens to have some RT app running on it. Note that this is in no way implies that just having more swap is in itself going to make the system use it. I was simply putting forward a situation in which the general rule (more swap is better) might not apply. poc -- fedora-list mailing list [email protected] To unsubscribe: https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/fedora-list Guidelines: http://fedoraproject.org/wiki/Communicate/MailingListGuidelines
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