On Wed, Nov 21, 2012 at 12:23:42PM -0800, David Guntner wrote: > Hi all, > > While still trying to figure out why Thunderbird isn't working so well > with Dovecot, I figured I'd move onto another mystery; thought I'd seek > out some opinions here. :-) > > When setting up Linux systems, I've always set up a separate swap > partition. I was reading a few days ago that apparently there's a nifty > way to do like Windows does (that alone should probably be good enough > reason to *not* do it... :-) ) and set up a swap *file* instead. > > So, anyone? Pros & cons? Is there any reason to prefer one over the other? > > One thing to know about up front - my new Debian setup is on my home > server. It runs 24/7 and I *never* suspend/hibernate it. So since it > never has to resume from a swap partition, that particular item is moot. :-) > > So, what is the common "best practice" (more-or-less) consensus on the > subject these days? > I use swap partitions on all my computers, but on a live USB stick I use a swap file. The reason for using the file is so I can easily change the size of the swap space (for instance, if I run out of room for my data).
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