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Top Forums UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers Size of swap partition during installation Post 302353930 by Corona688 on Wednesday 16th of September 2009 02:06:53 PM
Old 09-16-2009
The "twice as much swap as ram" rule of thumb comes from the good 'ol days when you never, ever had enough RAM and always burdened your system to the breaking point. The performance cost of waiting for swap is much higher than it used to be since CPU and RAM have sped up much faster than disk seeking; you'd need a RAID for multiple gigs of swap to be useful now. I never give more than a gig of swap for single-disk systems, usually just 512M.

That sounds like a good system to install Linux on. Smilie Old enough to be cheap, powerful enough to be useful. We used one for 3 years for everything you want plus file storage, DVD burning, and a hefty live database on top of that, often at the same time. A PIII can do a lot if you don't put Windows on it...

Last edited by Corona688; 09-16-2009 at 03:18 PM..
 

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KVM_SWAPINFO(3) 					   BSD Library Functions Manual 					   KVM_SWAPINFO(3)

NAME
kvm_getswapinfo -- return swap summary statistics for the system LIBRARY
Kernel Data Access Library (libkvm, -lkvm) SYNOPSIS
#include <kvm.h> int kvm_getswapinfo(kvm_t *kd, struct kvm_swap *, int maxswap, int flags); DESCRIPTION
The kvm_getswapinfo() function fills an array of kvm_swap structures with swap summary information for each swap device, for up to maxswap - 1 devices. The number of devices, up to maxswap - 1, is returned. A grand total of all swap devices (including any devices that go beyond maxswap - 1) is returned in one additional array entry. This entry is not counted in the return value. Thus, if you specify a maxswap value of 1, the function will typically return the value 0 and the single kvm_swap structure will be filled with the grand total over all swap devices. The grand total is calculated from all available swap devices whether or not you made room for them all in the array. The grand total is returned. The flags argument is currently unused and must be passed as 0. If an error occurs, -1 is returned. Each swap partition and the grand total is summarized in the kvm_swap structure. This structure contains the following fields: char ksw_devname[]; int ksw_total; int ksw_used; int ksw_flags; Values are in PAGE_SIZE'd chunks (see getpagesize(3)). ksw_flags contains a copy of the swap device flags. CACHING
This function caches the nlist values for various kernel variables which it reuses in successive calls. You may call the function with kd == NULL to clear the cache. DIAGNOSTICS
If the load average was unobtainable, -1 is returned; otherwise, the number of swap devices actually retrieved is returned. If the name of the swap device does not fit in the static char buffer in the structure, it is truncated. The buffer is always zero termi- nated. SEE ALSO
kvm(3) BSD
January 22, 1999 BSD
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