In the last episode (Jun 20), Francisco Reyes said: > On Mon, 20 Jun 2005, Dan Nelson wrote: > > When the system is low on memory, it will force the least used > > blocks of memory to swap. It will not free the swap space until > > the process owning them exits > > Have not found any program to see what programs are using the swap, > but as I think about it, the current method is not very "smart". I > guess any other method is difficult to implement. > > How wonder how the current method affects performance. Basically if > there is a surge of memory usage and processes start that use the > swap and these processes are long lived.. I wonder if performance > will be affected.
There may even be a performance gain, since if the system comes under memory pressure again, some of the in-memory pages of those long-lived processes previously copied to swap may still be clean, and the system won't even have to page them out; it can simply free the RAM. I can't think of any way for there to be a performance hit, unless you actually run out of swap. -- Dan Nelson [EMAIL PROTECTED] _______________________________________________ freebsd-questions@freebsd.org mailing list http://lists.freebsd.org/mailman/listinfo/freebsd-questions To unsubscribe, send any mail to "[EMAIL PROTECTED]"