From: james miller <jamtat@mailandnews.com>
To: linux-newbie <linux-newbie@vger.kernel.org>
Subject: RE: RAM and swap partition
Date: Mon, 9 Dec 2002 13:22:53 -0500 [thread overview]
Message-ID: <3DF4FBF0@mailandnews.com> (raw)
Let me pose the RAM question in another way to see if it can elicit a
generic, "rule-of-thumb" response this way. If a person uses their
computer as a sort of personal workstation using a fairly recent distro
and requires that it have an Xwindows gui, using applications like web
browsers, email clients, wordprocessing software and maybe Gimp on
occassion, at what point would such a person need to have a swap
partition? In other words, can it be stated in somewhat generic terms
"if said user had less than X MB RAM, they will definitely need a swap
partition"? And what about guidelines for swap partition size in such a
case: can such be stated as well? Like, say, "if this individual has
only 32 MB RAM, he should have a 64 MB swap partition" or "if he has 64
MB RAM he'll only need a 64 MB swap partition"?
Thanks, James
>===== Original Message From Chuck Gelm <nc8q@gelm.net> =====
>Ditto to what Ray said.
>
> Perhaps you could run your system with a 'swap file' and see
>how big it ever gets. Then make a swap partition just that size
>or a little larger. ;-)
>
> My current firewall-router (aDSL to 100 Mb LAN) has 32 megabytes
> of RAM and has not used any swap memory, AFAICR.
> Another workstation with 64 M of RAM has used 3 M of swap.
> Another workstation with 160 M of RAM has used 2 M of swap.
> Another laptop with 16 M of RAM, XFfree86 v4.0.3, and I just
> ran Netscape v4.77 under fvwm95, loaded a small web page,
> has used 2.6 M of swap.
>
> IMHO, it depends. ;-)
>
>HTH, Chuck
>
>Ray Olszewski wrote:
>>
>> At 01:15 PM 12/8/02 +0000, Rolf Edlund wrote:
>> >Originally to: james niland
>> >
>> >
>> > jn> I know some people who run happily without a swap at all.
>> >
>> >How low RAM can I use, without running a swap ? Can I for example
>do it on
>> >a 486
>> >with 4 MB RAM ?
>>
>> The way you ask this question, it has no real answer. How little
>memory a
>> system can run with depends on what tasks it is doing. And the
>choice of
>> CPU is pretty much irrelevant to this question (its only slight
>relevance
>> is in the smaller size of CPU-specific kernels).
>>
>> That said ... running any sort of Linux system in less than 8 MB of
>real
>> (not swap) RAM poses special challenges ... most modern distros
>can't even
>> install on such systems (only Slackware, I think, still offers a
>"low
>> memory" install option) and you won't be able to do much with such
>a
>> system. In practice, the smallest systems I've ever run without
>swap were
>> 486s with 16 MB of RAM, and that was for special purpose systems
>like
>> routers. While these days I routinely run my workstations without a
>swap
>> partition, they have at least 256 MB of RAM.
>>
>> --
>> -------------------------------------------"Never tell me the
>odds!"--------
>> Ray Olszewski -- Han Solo
>> Palo Alto, California, USA ray@comarre.com
>>
>-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
--
>>
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next reply other threads:[~2002-12-09 18:22 UTC|newest]
Thread overview: 24+ messages / expand[flat|nested] mbox.gz Atom feed top
2002-12-09 18:22 james miller [this message]
2002-12-09 18:47 ` RAM and swap partition Ray Olszewski
2002-12-10 8:39 ` ichi
2002-12-09 20:59 ` Chuck Gelm
2002-12-09 20:59 ` Chuck Gelm
2002-12-10 8:15 ` ichi
-- strict thread matches above, loose matches on Subject: below --
2002-12-16 0:00 Heimo Claasen
2002-12-16 21:33 ` Chuck Gelm
2002-12-15 0:00 Heimo Claasen
2002-12-15 4:07 ` Chuck Gelm
2002-12-13 0:00 Heimo Claasen
2002-12-13 22:31 ` Chuck Gelm
2002-12-07 0:00 Heimo Claasen
2002-12-08 2:28 ` whitnl73
2002-12-07 0:00 Heimo Claasen
2002-12-08 0:24 ` james niland
2002-12-08 13:15 ` Rolf Edlund
2002-12-08 15:58 ` Ray Olszewski
2002-12-08 21:43 ` Chuck Gelm
2002-12-11 18:32 ` Rolf Edlund
2002-12-09 7:13 ` ichi
2002-12-08 21:39 ` whitnl73
2002-12-11 18:03 ` Rolf Edlund
2002-12-08 0:35 ` dashielljt
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