So interestingly enough I was looking at my swap from this convo, and
surprisingly noticed that I'd never added any swap to this system! I built
the swap lvm slice, but never added it to the fstab, don't remember if
on-purpose or not. This system has 128gb of ram, so not that I notice
really, but might explain why I might see some weird lagging at times. I
usually blame (crap) compositing...
I suppose I've been using this pc for a couple years now without swap, so
it *is* doable (with a lot of ram), but I think I might enable it and see
if things are any better with than without swap.
-mb
On Mon, Sep 24, 2018 at 9:46 AM Stephen Partington <
cryptworks@gmail.com>
wrote:
> YEah, So I always consider installing at least a GB or two for swap and
> setting swappiness to 0 for that. It also might explain why Mr Butash still
> can see a difference in performance on what he does when swap is there or
> not.
>
> On Mon, Sep 24, 2018 at 9:44 AM Carruth, Rusty <Rusty.Carruth@smartm.com>
> wrote:
>
>> Wow, that quote is very interesting.
>>
>>
>>
>> Thanks!
>>
>>
>>
>> (google found the reference for me. One of them (possibly the original
>> reference others are using) is
>> https://www.kernel.org/doc/gorman/html/understand/understand014.html )
>>
>>
>>
>> I read it, and it appears that the reference is talking primarily about
>> what the kernel does. I kept searching and couldn’t find any definitive
>> statement that a PROGRAM could request this, however apparently some JVM
>> somewhere can do something with memory that almost requires there be swap
>> to keep the JVM from getting killed by the OOM monster… er, killer… er,
>> task.. er, whatever.
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>> Rusty
>>
>>
>>
>> *From:* PLUG-discuss [mailto:plug-discuss-bounces@lists.phxlinux.org] *On
>> Behalf Of *Stephen Partington
>> *Sent:* Sunday, September 23, 2018 12:18 AM
>> *To:* Main PLUG discussion list
>> *Subject:* Re: To swap or not to swap ;-) (was RE: To lvm or not to lvm)
>>
>>
>>
>> I have found some applications use swap with direct calls.
>>
>>
>>
>> "A significant number of the pages referenced by a process early in its
>> life may only be used for initialisation and then never used again. It is
>> better to swap out those pages and create more disk buffers than leave them
>> resident and unused."
>>
>>
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>
>
>
> --
> A mouse trap, placed on top of your alarm clock, will prevent you from
> rolling over and going back to sleep after you hit the snooze button.
>
> Stephen
>
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