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Top Forums UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users Please advise good source of info about swapping Post 302614305 by Corona688 on Wednesday 28th of March 2012 11:49:57 AM
Old 03-28-2012
These systems respond somewhat differently to swap.

If you ask for 20GB of RAM in Linux it will reserve you that much address space, not that much RAM. Only when you actually start using these individual pages of RAM will it give you actual memory. If programs end up using more RAM than you actually have, pieces will start having to end up in swap. Without swap, or when the swap's full, the kernel will start killing the worst offenders to reclaim some RAM and stop the system from deadlocking. This is known as 'overcommit' and can be disabled if you really want, but is useful for some situations; the google search engine's servers apparently rely heavily on the Linux OOM-killer.

Some other systems(HP-UX if I recall) don't have any sort of overcommit. All memory must be backed by swap of some sort. If you don't have enough, some memory will be used to act like swap for other memory.

I think Solaris is somewhere between these two extremes.
 

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SWAPON(2)						      BSD System Calls Manual							 SWAPON(2)

NAME
swapon, swapoff -- control devices for interleaved paging/swapping LIBRARY
Standard C Library (libc, -lc) SYNOPSIS
#include <unistd.h> int swapon(const char *special); int swapoff(const char *special); DESCRIPTION
The swapon() system call makes the block device special available to the system for allocation for paging and swapping. The names of poten- tially available devices are known to the system and defined at system configuration time. The size of the swap area on special is calcu- lated at the time the device is first made available for swapping. The swapoff() system call disables paging and swapping on the given device. All associated swap metadata are deallocated, and the device is made available for other purposes. RETURN VALUES
If an error has occurred, a value of -1 is returned and errno is set to indicate the error. ERRORS
Both swapon() and swapoff() can fail if: [ENOTDIR] A component of the path prefix is not a directory. [ENAMETOOLONG] A component of a pathname exceeded 255 characters, or an entire path name exceeded 1023 characters. [ENOENT] The named device does not exist. [EACCES] Search permission is denied for a component of the path prefix. [ELOOP] Too many symbolic links were encountered in translating the pathname. [EPERM] The caller is not the super-user. [EFAULT] The special argument points outside the process's allocated address space. Additionally, swapon() can fail for the following reasons: [ENOTBLK] The special argument is not a block device. [EBUSY] The device specified by special has already been made available for swapping [ENXIO] The major device number of special is out of range (this indicates no device driver exists for the associated hardware). [EIO] An I/O error occurred while opening the swap device. Lastly, swapoff() can fail if: [EINVAL] The system is not currently swapping to special. [ENOMEM] Not enough virtual memory is available to safely disable paging and swapping to the given device. SEE ALSO
config(8), swapon(8), sysctl(8) HISTORY
The swapon() system call appeared in 4.0BSD. The swapoff() system call appeared in FreeBSD 5.0. BSD
October 4, 2013 BSD
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