> -----Original Message-----
> From: Tony Mountifield <t...@softins.co.uk>
> Sent: Tuesday, August 06, 2019 5:44 AM
> To: centos@centos.org
> Subject: Re: [CentOS] browsers slowing Centos 7 installation to a crawl
> 
> In article <alpine.deb.2.20.1908051718240.19...@mail.cs.ndsu.nodak.edu>,
> Michael Hennebry <henne...@web.cs.ndsu.nodak.edu> wrote:
> >
> > I'll need to do some digging to discover whether my box needs DDR2 or
> DDR3.DDR3
> > I doubt it's DDR4.
> 
> Do:
> 
> # dmidecode | less
> 
> and look for the entries for the existing RAM you have. It will also tell
> you if you have any unpopulated RAM slots ("No module installed").
> 
<SNIP>

In the mean time you could enable zswap[1] to make the most out of the ram and 
swap you do have.
according to [2] either add 'zswap.enabled=1' to the boot line or 'echo 1 > 
/sys/module/zswap/parameters/enabled'

On an EL6 system with 512M of ram (yes that is correct, .5GB, actually ~.4GB 
because some is shared with the intel video) I use up-to-date EL6 firefox 
reasonably comfortably at home using zswap, setting max_pool_percent to 40.

I am trying to remember which kernel 7 is running (I tend to use the elrepo LT 
kernel on EL6) and if it has zswap or only zram. 

before switching to the LT kernel I used zram [3] on the machine as swap space 
(pretending to be 90% of ram) instead and it works very fast, but when it runs 
out (say on a site with lots of JPGs) and you hit real swap again performance 
tanks VERY badly.  EL7 may have zram setup to swap in such a way that you can 
'sysctl start zram' and try it out.

Good luck.

[1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Zswap
[2] https://www.kernel.org/doc/html/latest/vm/zswap.html
[3] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Zram

--
Even when this disclaimer is not here:
I am not a contracting officer. I do not have authority to make or modify the 
terms of any contract.

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