Hello, A closed source program exists freely downloadable for Windows and some version of Linux.
I run it with Linux compatibility and emulation under NetBSD, and this program, that should simply take a line at a time from stdin and convert coordinates, leads, when there are too many lines (records) to an exhaustion of the NetBSD swap partition (limited in size because with the amount of memory here and the programs it runs, there should have been far enough). The question: is this the compatibility layer that uses the swap partition instead of the RAM for its allocation or is this the program itself that uses it (and there is enough RAM on the node for accommodating it even if I do not understand why it should need a huge amount). Is there a sysctl tuning that could instruct to use the RAM and not goes to the swap? (This can be also simply a memory leak in the program but since the RAM is not exhausted...). TIA, -- Thierry Laronde <tlaronde +AT+ polynum +dot+ com> http://www.kergis.com/ http://www.sbfa.fr/ Key fingerprint = 0FF7 E906 FBAF FE95 FD89 250D 52B1 AE95 6006 F40C