> -----Original Message----- > From: plug-discuss-admin@lists.plug.phoenix.az.us > [mailto:plug-discuss-admin@lists.plug.phoenix.az.us]On Behalf Of KevinO > Sent: Monday, May 14, 2001 7:51 PM > To: plug-discuss@lists.plug.phoenix.az.us > Subject: Re: virtual memory swap size > > > Craig White wrote: > > > I am amazed at the diversity of opinion here. It would seem > that 2X is safe > > but not necessarily going to be the fastest setting. My > interest is because > > I am going to set up what is likely to be my first server that > will actually > > be serving a fair amount of web pages and it would seem that I > have to make > > allowances for this thing to keep running - even if it goes > slow by way of > > VM. It has 128M RAM but I think that it's necessary to upgrade > it to 512K - > > RAM's cheap anyway. I don't mind giving away 1 gigabyte of > memory over to VM > > if it's gonna help to keep this thing alive. > > > > The more ram the merrier. If you are thinking of running X and a web > server at > the same time (gasp), upgrade to more ram. > > Having a swap file, of any size, will not slow down your machine. Not > having one, > and running out of memory will mean a crash. > > So go for the 512 MB, and add a swap file for those 'just in case' times > ... > > You can always start with a 150 to 250 MB swap file and then watch the > box to > make sure you don't need more. If you do run out of ram and start to > swap, things > a r e g o i n g t o s l o o o w d o w n . . . . . but at least it > won't crash. > > Expect the amount of 'free ram' displayed to dwindle down towards zero > at times. > It doesn't necessarily mean that you don't have any ram available, the > kernel just > hates to see any extra go to waste. It will be used for buffers/disk > cache and be > returned to use as soon as the box has something better to do with it... > > Yes, this means more ram than you 'need' can speed things up since you > don't need > to load something from disk if it is already in ram. > > 512MB is a pretty large chunk of ram unless you are running a LARGE > load. > > YMMV > ----- I'm gathering that running Apache/PHP4/MySQL for imp is a resource pig. I play with it at home but I only have one user (me). Here, we may have 10-20 users online at any time. Thanks, Craig