Undervolting is the flip side of overclocking. Both count on the fact
that a typical CPU has some operational margin; it does a bit better
on the speed/voltage curve than the specs guarantee. Most motherboards
that enable overclocking can also be undervolted; it's something to
explore if you are
I'm looking for some advice on tuning my linux box's memory management.
I've got an older workstation that has merely 4GB of memory. If I try
to run Firefox, and a few java apps (e.g., Eclipse), my machine thrashes
about and effectively locks up because of out-of-memory issues.
For example: the
On Fri, Jun 19, 2015 at 10:01:57AM -0400, Matthew Gillen wrote:
I'm looking for some advice on tuning my linux box's memory management.
I've got an older workstation that has merely 4GB of memory. If I try
to run Firefox, and a few java apps (e.g., Eclipse), my machine thrashes
about and
How Swap and Memory are used is controlled largely by the 'swappiness'
setting. The default is correct for servers but not for workstations.
swap - How do I configure swappiness? - Ask Ubuntu
The Linux kernel provides a tweakable setting that controls how often
the swap file is used, called
On Fri, 19 Jun 2015 10:01:57 -0400
Matthew Gillen m...@mattgillen.net wrote:
I'm looking for some advice on tuning my linux box's memory
management. I've got an older workstation that has merely 4GB of
memory. If I try to run Firefox, and a few java apps (e.g.,
Eclipse), my machine thrashes
16GB seems like a small amount of memory to me; I generally use 24GB or
more. Different strokes...
--DTVZ
On Fri, Jun 19, 2015 at 11:08 AM, Mike Small sma...@panix.com wrote:
4.0 GB seems like a large amount of memory to me. It's way more than
I have a use for.
*Drew Van ZandtArtisan's
On Jun 19, 2015, at 10:01 AM, Matthew Gillen m...@mattgillen.net wrote:
I'm looking for some advice on tuning my linux box's memory management.
I've got an older workstation that has merely 4GB of memory. If I try
to run Firefox, and a few java apps (e.g., Eclipse), my machine thrashes
On Fri, Jun 19, 2015 at 02:44:35PM +, Marcia K Wilbur wrote:
I'm not sure what you are using for the OS but I'll guess - Ubuntu
or some variant of Ubuntu..
If so, stop doing that. If not, let us know. Then, maybe there are
other solutions.
The memory leak wrt Firefox has been an issue
On 6/19/2015 10:01 AM, Matthew Gillen wrote:
Does anyone have any tips on how to prevent linux from thrashing like
that? The behavior when low on memory seems atrociously bad.
Install more RAM or stop using programs that use more RAM than you have.
--
Rich P.
Jerry Natowitz j.natow...@rcn.com writes:
My advise on Firefox is to close it down completely whenever you have
finished using it. There seems to be a lot of memory leaking, I've
seen Firefox grow into multi-gigabyte virtual size in a matter of
hours.
I leave it running all the time and
My advise on Firefox is to close it down completely whenever you have
finished using it. There seems to be a lot of memory leaking, I've seen
Firefox grow into multi-gigabyte virtual size in a matter of hours.
I have not experimented with shutting down Firefox with multiple windows
and tabs,
Hardware design, several things. Primarily EM simulation and big FPGA sim,
complex analog sim, or just big schematics. When doing a schematic review,
it is helpful to have half a dozen or more large PDFs (datasheets) open
while viewing schematics, a few spreadsheets, some Word Visio design
On Fri, Jun 19, 2015 at 11:02 AM, Steve Litt sl...@troubleshooters.com wrote:
I haven't seen any stats quoted in your email, from the top program,
that indicate it's a RAM problem. Firefox and its pet
plugin-container use a heck of a lot of CPU. Until very recently I
was using a 4GB machine,
On 6/19/2015 11:02 AM, Steve Litt wrote:
Today I have a 16GB RAM box, with dual core CPU (I wanted things to
stay cool),
I think I recently mentioned buying a new notebook. If I didn't, well I
am mentioning it now: a Mythlogic-branded Clevo P750ZM. It has a Core
i7-4790K processor. You read
On 6/19/2015 3:07 PM, Joe Polcari wrote:
This also assumes that you have a way to adjust voltages I¹ve only seen
something like that on gaming Pcs.
In principle, everything that supports dynamic frequency scaling has a
mechanism for adjusting voltages. In practice, whether or not the M/B
...and I probably left 6 other things that change out, that was just what
came to mind immediately. :-)
*Drew Van ZandtArtisan's Asylum Board of DirectorsFirefly Arts Collective
Board of Directors*
On Fri, Jun 19, 2015 at 2:51 PM, Joe Polcari j...@polcari.com wrote:
And that’s why. Thanks.
And that¹s why. Thanks.
From: Drew Van Zandt drew.vanza...@gmail.com
Date: Friday, June 19, 2015 at 1:32 PM
To: j...@polcari.com j...@polcari.com
Cc: Richard Pieri richard.pi...@gmail.com, discuss@blu.org
discuss@blu.org
Subject: Re: [Discuss] Cool Processing
You're assuming changing the
Matthew Gillen m...@mattgillen.net wrote:
If I try
to run Firefox, and a few java apps (e.g., Eclipse), my machine thrashes
about and effectively locks up because of out-of-memory issues.
I finally evicted Firefox from my life about 3 years ago over this. I open too
many tabs, mainly because
This also assumes that you have a way to adjust voltages I¹ve only seen
something like that on gaming Pcs.
From: Drew Van Zandt drew.vanza...@gmail.com
Date: Friday, June 19, 2015 at 2:52 PM
To: j...@polcari.com j...@polcari.com
Cc: Richard Pieri richard.pi...@gmail.com, discuss@blu.org
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