Hi all!
Well, top on Eskimo shows something along these lines:
<<<
Mem: 321776k total, 306432k used, 15344k free, 23304k buffers
Swap: 499688k total, 94528k used, 405160k free, 110188k cached
>>>
Which means we're close to occupying all the RAM. Sometimes it's even only
2000K of RAM left.
If we want the system to perform well, we need to make sure it has enough RAM.
Now, while 320K was enough when we got Eskimo, it's not a lot now. Since
then, programs have expanded in size, (from RedHat 6.2 to Debian Woody to
Debian Sarge which we are using now), and we also run more stuff (MediaWiki,
Sympa, etc.). If we wish to upgrade to Postfix (which I do, at least), then
we may need even more RAM.
I don't suppose upgrading Eskimo's memory will cost too much and it certainly
would save us a lot of frustration in the future. I am willing to finance
part of this cost (or all of it should the need arise) from my own pocket.
So what do you say?
Regards,
Shlomi Fish
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Shlomi Fish [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Homepage: http://www.shlomifish.org/
95% of the programmers consider 95% of the code they did not write, in the
bottom 5%.