----- Original Message ----- > From: "Travis" <hcoy...@ghostar.org>
> Never is such a harsh word. > The point is not all use-cases can be simply solved by physically > adding more RAM to a system or by mmaping. I agree with that. Every time these conversations come up I am always amazed at how many times "Never" and other absolute terms are tossed around. These systems that we manage do so many different jobs there's no way to create a single set of rules that covers every single use case. If the uses of these systems were limited to exact operational parameters, we'd be managing Commodore-64's but they're not, they all do different tasks and more than occasionally, the tasks they're asked to do we have no control over, much less, no say in the matter. I'm sure that very few if any get a chance to tell the application developers how to properly manage the resources they're using. These systems were designed to run under a wide range of use-cases and each of these situations plays an integral roll in establishing the tuning objectives that are targeted. It is a moving target in some cases and that in and of itself is a use-case that must be planned for! Swapping and the ability to swap is *one* of a number of design features that was designed in to allow us to handle some of those various use-cases. Simply saying "never swap" or the more prevalent implication of "if you swap you're not doing your job well and should be put in the stocks and publicly humiliated" does no one any good and just makes us all look snarky and unhelpful. (IMNSHO) -- << MCT >> Michael C Tiernan. Is God a performance artist? http://www.linkedin.com/in/mtiernan _______________________________________________ Tech mailing list Tech@lists.lopsa.org https://lists.lopsa.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/tech This list provided by the League of Professional System Administrators http://lopsa.org/