> On Mon, 12 Apr 2004, Michael Gale wrote:
> > Making SWAP partitions twice your RAM is the old approache. If you read
> > any of the recent linux documents or mailing list you will find that it
> > is not needed. Once a server has more then 1GB of RAM you will most
> > likely not need to double all your swap space.
On 12.04 22:24, Henrik Nordstrom wrote:
> I have not looked into how 2.6 behaves yet, but Linux-2.4 and RedHat 2.4
> kernels can end up in interesting corner cases resulting in out-of-memory
> conditions when deep in swap unless the swap partition is sufficiently
> large to contain all your applications, this regardless of how much or
I'd say, if a system has more swap space than memory space, it can use
swap in a different way (using different algorithm) that will speed up
things a little bit. BUT using swap this way would slow things up if you
have less swap than memory.
linux kernels 2.4 under 2.4.10 had a problem that caused very low
performance if you had less swap than 2xRAM (I don't know if it was
because of problem I described above)
However having enough memory will speed up things much more :)
However this discussion is not related to squid, so let's say the old
good: on a system with squid, you should have enough memory not to swap at
all.
-- Matus UHLAR - fantomas, [email protected] ; http://www.fantomas.sk/ Warning: I wish NOT to receive e-mail advertising to this address. Varovanie: na tuto adresu chcem NEDOSTAVAT akukolvek reklamnu postu. - Have you got anything without Spam in it? - Well, there's Spam egg sausage and Spam, that's not got much Spam in it.Received on Tue Apr 13 2004 - 02:56:48 MDT
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