on Tue, Apr 16, 2002, Oki DZ ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) wrote: > Hi, > > On a 128Mbytes machine, how much swap space can it handle? Would it be all > right to assign it 384Mbytes?
I tend toward 2-3 times physical RAM for swap, as swap partitions, on the following basis: - Despite arguments that as memory increases, you no longer need as much swap, my sense is that this is really a constant. Swap is there for programs that are, er, swapped. Which isn't of itself a bad thing. Swapping itself is what sucks, and if you're actively paging in and out of memory constantly, you've got problems. So the old 2-3x RAM rule of thumb holds, even as memory scales to the GiB range. - It's a lot easier to add memory than it is to repartition disk. So if you give yourself two or three swap partitions, you can leave one (or more) disabled until you max your RAM. - Some level of disk optimization may occur by distributing your swap across mutliple spindles. At the very least, put your first swap partition on a fast, but underutilized, drive, if you have multiple drives installed (I tend to put a swap with my /home partition). Peace. -- Karsten M. Self <kmself@ix.netcom.com> http://kmself.home.netcom.com/ What Part of "Gestalt" don't you understand? The Consumer Broadband and Digital Television Promotion Act: Because the Republicans had Enron. http://www.politechbot.com/docs/cbdtpa/hollings.s2048.032102.html
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