[Dieter Maurer]
> But with 32 bit addresses, a single process cannot use more than 4GB RAM.
I expect that BIOS and/or OS often don't even allow that (e.g., user-space
VM addresses are limited to 31 bits in Win32). I started working on 64-bit
machines in the late 70's, so it's hard to believe that
[Dylan Jay]
> ...
> Like generational garbage collection, which is I guess is one way to take
> into account of frequency of use. When an object is used more than X
> times it jumps to the next generation. In the next generation it is
> checked less often making it more efficient than just checking
Tim Peters wrote at 2005-6-7 23:05 -0400:
> ...
>Buying more RAM is an idea that just never gets old .
But with 32 bit addresses, a single process cannot use more than
4GB RAM.
--
Dieter
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[Chris McDonough]
> One way to potentially soften the impact of cache busting by spiders
> might be to allow Zope to choose a particular ZODB connection based on
> request parameters (like sessionid or requesting ip address, or most
> likely user agent in the case of "legitimate" spiders). This is
One way to potentially soften the impact of cache busting by spiders
might be to allow Zope to choose a particular ZODB connection based on
request parameters (like sessionid or requesting ip address, or most
likely user agent in the case of "legitimate" spiders). This is a
modification to Zope th