Kevin Buettner wrote: > The bonnie documentation at > > http://www.textuality.com/bonnie/advice.html > > suggests that the file size be four times the size of your memory. > This turned out to be impossible to do, however, since the test > machine has 1GB or memory and because it's an x86 box which limits us > to 2GB files. The ``bonnie'' docs suggest using a value of 2047 MB in > this case. So that's what I did, even though this value is slightly > less than twice the memory size on this machine. I have a number of > applications running though and ``free'' reports 739696 KB of memory > free after discounting the space used for the disk buffer cache. Yanking half the memory isnt something I would expect to effect what you are trying to measure - except to make the test results MORE valid, although it does require a pair of reboots (assuming you put it back in). Odds are that gig is on more than one stick :-) On another note, why exactly is it that a 32bit system limits one to 2GB files, rather than 4GB files? Whos bright idea was it to use a signed integer rather than an unsigned one to point to a location in a file, anyways? -- jkenner @ mindspring . com__ I Support Linux: _> _ _ |_ _ _ _| Working Together To <__(_||_)| )| `(_|(_)(_| To Build A Better Future. |