On Dec 13, 8:54am, Sonja Michelle L. Thomas wrote: > I have 256MB of RAM in my system running RH6.2 on a PII 233Mhz MMX. > here is what free is reporting: > > total used free shared buffers > cached > Mem: 257720 218468 39252 52564 138004 > 34356 > - -/+ buffers/cache: 46108 211612 > Swap: 130748 4448 126300 > > Now it seems to bounce back and forth between low usage, like 40-60MB > used to 200+ used. It' almost like windows in this issue: > I attached a ps -A to a txt file (was to spammy to paste). I am > running KDE ver 1.1.2 and even with that, of course being displayed > on an Xserver on another machine, I still get really good memory > useage cept when I get this moments when it's all taken up. I'm > stumped. Which number in the above ``free'' report are you looking at? If you're looking at the "Mem:" line, this line reports the amount of memory used by both applications and the (file) buffer cache. The line you should be looking at to determine how much memory is being used by your applications is the second line: "-/+ buffers/cache". In your free report, above, you have only 45MB being used by your applications, with 206MB free. If you're looking at the top line for your free numbers, you'll see this bounce around quite a bit. If you start a short-lived, memory hungry application, it'll "steal" some memory from the buffer/cached pool and then release it when it is done. The kernel won't immediately reuse it for file caching, so you'll have some truly free memory for a while. I don't think that there is any cause for concern on your part. The Linux kernel is merely attempting to make the most of the resources that you have on your machine. In fact, throwing more memory in the machine is almost always beneficial even if you do not expect your applications to directly use it. The reason is that the kernel can use it for caching files (think of it as a smart RAM disk w/ backing store) which will both improve performance as well as limit wear and tear on your hard drives. Kevin