On Thu, May 15, 2003 at 01:42:03PM +0800, Lao Yu wrote:
> I have a PC of 768M memory. How much swap space should I allocate in
> my Red Hat 8.0? According to the manual, it should be 2 X 768 = 1536
> M. Is this too much?

Here are some considerations:

1) Disk space is cheap, having too much swap isn't a problem except
   for the loss of disk space.

2) The more RAM you have the less you need swap, but also the more
   swap you *can* use without actively paging a whole bunch.

3) 768 MB of RAM is quite a bit, it could profitably a lot of swap,
   but it could run quite nicely with none.

I suggest at least a few hundred MB to let the system shuffle off some
unused stuff now and then in favor of disk caching and buffering,
which can speed things up.  (No swap is conceivable, however.)  Giving
it 1 GB of swap, isn't crazy either.  Once I did get my notebook using
more swap than RAM, and it still ran...

 - On my notebook I have 192 MB of RAM, 256 MB of swap, 13 GB disk.

 - On my basement server I have 256 MB RAM, 1 GB swap, 60 GB disk.

 - On my kitchen computer I have 256 MB RAM, 1 GB swap, 80 GB disk.

 - On my work computer I have 512 GB RAM, 1 GB swap, and I forget how
   big a disk--not terribly big.

You can see I like the nice round 1 GB.


I suggest you go with either zero (lean, no fluff attitude), or 512 MB
(conservative), or 1 GB (ample but not crazy), whatever "feels" best.


-kb


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