swap
coverturtle
coverturtle at gmail.com
Sun Mar 15 21:13:37 MST 2015
The quick answer is that a swap partition is faster than a swap file.
Using a file means you have the overhead of the file system software.
Using a partition means that the kernel can use the swap space with less
overhead.
If you noticed when you installed, the linux installer only wants to
allocate as much swap space as you have memory. If you intend to add
more memory later, you might want to
make your swap partition as large as the maximum size of memory you
computer will hold. OTOH, I've noticed that I hardly ever use any swap
space at all and I only have 2GB
of memory.
Watch the memory use in more or less real time in you system monitor app.
On 03/15/2015 09:13 PM, Michael Havens wrote:
> I was wondering why Linux uses a swap partition rather than a swap
> file. I mean I would think a swap file would be superior since a files
> size can fluctuate whereas a partition is static.
> :-)~MIKE~(-:
>
>
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