[ale] Anyone know if this is true?
alan at alanlee.org
alan at alanlee.org
Thu Oct 13 11:11:02 EDT 2011
It seems people are making this way more complicated than it needs to be.
Either that or I'm missing something. swap just extends your total RAM pages
across disk storage. The only thing to figure out is based on your maximum
computer use case, determine how much RAM you need in total. Subtract your
physical RAM from that to get swap size. In essence it's the same thing being
discussed so far, but these equations like 2x physical ram for the first and
last so and so tier are just plain ridiculous.
The question that should be answered is how much RAM do you need. That will
depend on use case and if you ask 100 different people they all have different
use cases. Hence the 100 different answers.
My $.02. Go big or go home. Disk space is cheaper than RAM. Take you best
guess then double whatever you come up with (640K is enough for everyone!).
Then if you still run out, add more with swap files instead of swap partitions.
In modern hardware, there isn't any noticeable speed improvement indirecting
through the file system layer for swap pages - you're swapping anyway! If you
were concerned with speed, you would have more RAM!
-Alan
On October 13, 2011 at 10:47 AM Ron Frazier <atllinuxenthinfo at c3energy.com>
wrote:
> Hi guys,
>
> This thread has prompted me to do a bit of research to try to see if I can
> find a consensus on the swap size issue. At the moment, it seems like ask 100
> people and get 100 different opinions. I haven't uncovered enough data to
> tabulate and summarize it at this point. I'm pretty sure my linux machines
> have plenty of swap for applications. I have 8 GB of swap on two machines
> which have 8 GB of RAM. If I look at the system monitor program in Gnome, it
> looks like the swap is rarely ever touched. By the way, having 8 GB of RAM in
> a laptop is a nice, new, liberating experience for me. It's really nice to be
> able to open several dozen browser tabs and a dozen or more applications
> without the machine even breathing too hard. This is my first laptop capable
> of that. I also have 8 GB of swap on a machine with 4 GB of RAM, so it should
> be sitting pretty, so to speak. I haven't found anything that says extra swap
> is harmful. What I don't know, is whether the two 8 GB machines would be able
> to hibernate (suspend to disk) properly, if the swap is equal to the RAM. I
> may have to increase the swap on those to 10 GB - 12 GB. This is not an issue
> in Windows since it uses a separate hibernate file.
>
> In my research, I found this article
> (http://lukasz.szmit.eu/2009/11/compcache-swap-on-linux-desktop.html). The
> article is a bit old, but this talks about a fascinating project called
> Compcache. Here's a quote from the page:
>
> ---> quote on <---
>
> Compcache is an open source project implementing an innovative approach to
> swap. This has been done before, but not for swap. Users of DOS and early
> Windows versions will remember DoubleSpace/DriveSpace, which was used to
> virtually expand available disk space, by storing files in a compressed form.
> Compcache does exactly that, but for swap, by creating a new block device in
> the system which interfaces with the special compressed memory region in RAM.
> On the plus side, Compcache can also be configured to use an alternative swap
> device when the RAM swap area is full.
>
> ---> quote off <---
>
> I think that is a really cool idea for low resource machines. While I don't
> know if I'll ever use it, since my modern machines have a decent amount of
> RAM, it could really benefit older, smaller machines. For example, I have an
> old IBM Thinkpad with 160 MB (yes MB) of RAM. I've pretty much retired the
> machine. It does run a GUI based version of Linux, just barely, but is
> painfully slow. The old 300 MHz processor doesn't help much either. I think
> I have an old version of Lubuntu on it. Anyway, this type of technology could
> give the machine more breathing room by compressing the memory, so it would be
> like having 256 MB of RAM. I also have an old Toshiba laptop which is topped
> out at 1 GB or RAM. Both Ubuntu 10.04 and Windows XP run pretty well.
> However, I could compress 512 MB of RAM and then effectively have 512 MB or
> normal RAM and 1 GB of swap.
>
> Here's the link for the Compcache project:http://code.google.com/p/compcache/
>
> Here's an interesting quote from their site: "With compcache at hypervisor
> level, we can compressanypart ofguestmemory transparently."
>
> Now, while I'll admit I don't understand all the implications of that
> statement, it looks like you could essentially compress all the RAM if running
> a lightweight hypervisor and running your OS as a guest.
>
> The project website also points out that embedded systems could benefit from
> the technology, where you have to justify every chip you put into a device.
>
> Finally, here is an interesting quote from the original article:
>
> ---> quote on <---
>
> On my desktop, a Dell Precision S390 with 2GB DDR2 RAM and a Maxtor Diamond
> Max 9 80GB drive, I am getting the following hdparm results (average of three
> runs) for my disk swap, and my compcache swap:
>
> Swap on disk: 58MB/s
> Compcache swap: 557MB/s
>
> An order of magnitude better bandwidth at no expense? I like that.
>
> ---> quote off <---
>
> I like that idea too. I'd like to know what you guys think of this concept.
>
> Sincerely,
>
> Ron
>
> On 10/13/2011 8:58 AM, Rich Faulkner wrote:
> > For me depends upon the system as to swap size, but if I plan on using
> > hibernation features I have swap just over the size of RAM as in 1-1/2 times
> > as the general (old) rule that I've followed...generally a couple of gigs
> > for a desktop and I leave it at that. Being as I'm only building desktops
> > and laptops lately I'm not speaking to servers. An interesting experiment
> > is to do test installs to various system configs and see what a given distro
> > will do for a default installation. I consider this a benchmark from the
> > developers on an "ideal" configuration given the hardware provided. RinL
> >
> >
> > On Thu, 2011-10-13 at 08:45 -0400, Scott Castaline wrote:
> > >
On 10/12/2011 09:40 PM, Tavarvess Ware wrote:
>
> Scott I read the ram x 2= swap in my Linux classes as well and have
> generally followed that, but with memory soaring as it has lately i am
> starting to rethink that. A system 48gigs of memory would be 96 in
> swap..... I wonder if te old format has changed and I haven't heard
> yet.
>
I only go RAM x 2 = swap for the 1st 2 GB of RAM so 2GB RAM = 4GB swap.
From there on it's RAM x 1 = swap so 4GB RAM = 6GB swap. So your 48 GB
of RAM = 50GB swap, and yup that's one hell of a lot of swap space.
>
> On Oct 12, 2011 9:32 PM, "Scott Castaline" <
skotchman at gmail.com [mailto:skotchman at gmail.com]
> <
mailto:skotchman at gmail.com
>> wrote:
>
> On 10/12/2011 04:14 PM, planas wrote:
> > On Wed, 2011-10-12 at 15:13 -0400, Geoffrey Myers wrote:
> >> 'Just so you all know, when determining how much space to assign
> >> to
> >> swap: Swap isn't just used for paging or virtual memory
> management; swap
> >> is also used by power management for suspend-to-disk
> (hibernation). '
> >>
> >> I seriously don't know, so I'm asking.
> >>
> >
> > I have seen that a good swap size is ~1.5x the RAM.
> > --
> > Jay Lozier
> >
jslozier at gmail.com [mailto:jslozier at gmail.com]
<
mailto:jslozier at gmail.com
>
> >
> >
> >
> > _______________________________________________
> > Ale mailing list
> >
Ale at ale.org [mailto:Ale at ale.org]
<
mailto:Ale at ale.org
>
> >
http://mail.ale.org/mailman/listinfo/ale
> > See JOBS, ANNOUNCE and SCHOOLS lists at
> >
http://mail.ale.org/mailman/listinfo
> I remember from somewhere that upto 2GB use 2.0x RAM above 2GB of
> RAM go
> with 1:1 ratio so 4Gb RAM = 6GB swap. I don't remember why 2x on
> the
> first 2GB and this goes back to when 4GB was a lot on
> pre-configured
> retail boxes. So like Geoffrey I can't see having 18GB of swap for
> a
> 16GB machine.
>
> > >
> > >
>
--
(PS - If you email me and don't get a quick response, you might want to
call on the phone. I get about 300 emails per day from alternate energy
mailing lists and such. I don't always see new messages very quickly.)
Ron Frazier
770-205-9422 (O) Leave a message.
linuxdude AT c3energy.com
>
>
-------------- next part --------------
An HTML attachment was scrubbed...
URL: http://mail.ale.org/pipermail/ale/attachments/20111013/9ad67169/attachment-0001.html
More information about the Ale
mailing list