Michael Havens wrote: > I had a stroke of genius! (you are going to be proud of me for thinking of > this). This idea has been mulling around in my head for a while now. Wouldn't > it be lightning quick to put a swap file on a pendrive? No disk activity > would be needed at all! It would all have to do with the bus's speed. If you really wanted to do this, the thing to do would be a solid-state hard drive. Basically these are memory boards controlled by a hardware SCSI emulator, so the computer thinks they are an actual hard drive. They are expensive, and many are a pain to get working under Linux, but they can be very very very fast. I had 5 SMTP servers once that we added these to... After switching the qmail queue dir to a reiserfs fs on the drives the things totally hauled ass and 2 ended up pulling the load 5 were previously. The problem, though, is you lose the FS on reboot or power outage. Ours had a secondary power supply that we plugged into dedicate UPS's- just keeping data in RAM alive is pretty cheap, juice-wise, so the UPS could keep it alive even after an hour of no power. The only reason I can think of to do that is if you have a single server you cannot upgrade any further in terms of RAM and it is bound on swap I/O. > what are the drawbacks to doing this? how could I automate this? It will eventually die a nasty death, and you really don't want that to happen to swap. > man! why do most computers even have hard drives! Unless you are running a > business..... Solid-state storage simply is not ready to rely on in such a capacity. Jon Hansen hit the nail on the head with the flash storage problems, and especially in a swap capacity (eg lots of writes) the limited lifespan is a real problem. Great advances are being made in this area, but it will be some time before spinning platters go the way of the 5.25" floppy... ~Ben -- --- "Confession only helps if you actually feel bad for your actions. For you, it would just be a really long boast." -Tara http://www.emptiedout.com --------------------------------------------------- PLUG-discuss mailing list - PLUG-discuss@lists.plug.phoenix.az.us To subscribe, unsubscribe, or to change you mail settings: http://lists.PLUG.phoenix.az.us/mailman/listinfo/plug-discuss