Thanks Steve for your information.

As you said, I don't need care for caching sound files ?, Linux is responsible 
for the job ?, So at the first time, Asterisk will load sound files from hard 
disk, and after that, it will load from RAM. 

Thanks.



--- On Tue, 4/6/10, Steve Edwards <asterisk....@sedwards.com> wrote:

From: Steve Edwards <asterisk....@sedwards.com>
Subject: Re: [asterisk-users] Cache sound files for faster processing
To: "Asterisk Users Mailing List - Non-Commercial Discussion" 
<asterisk-users@lists.digium.com>
Date: Tuesday, April 6, 2010, 7:15 AM

>> Are there any way of configuring of Asterisk so it'll cache sound files 
>> in memory, and when Asterisk receive a call, instead of loading sound 
>> files from the disk

On Mon, 5 Apr 2010, Luki wrote:

> Not directly, but it's not really needed. A long as the machine has 
> enough RAM, the files will be served from RAM by the operating system. 
> Sure there is the overhead of opening/closing files and reading them, 
> but on modern OS this overhead is negligible if the files are cached 
> (asterisk may even use mmap, but I'm not sure).
>
> You can also make a ram disk (say via tmpfs), copy the sounds there and 
> symlink the sound directory to that location. However, I don't think you 
> will gain much.

A bit off topic, but recently I was trying to improve the performance of a 
MythTV frontend (a Linux home theater application).

I tried tmpfs and /dev/ramx and neither yielded noticeable improvement. My 
informal conclusion is that Linux does a good enough job at managing 
memory that tweaking is probably not worth it.

-- 
Thanks in advance,
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
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Newline                                              Fax: +1-760-731-3000

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