I read a time ago that, no matter the RAM you have, adding a
swap-area will improve performance a lot. So I tested.
I created a swap area twice as large as my RAM size (just an
arbitrary size), that is 1G. I've tested with lower sizes too. My RAM
is never filled (well, I haven't seen it filled, at least) since I
always work on console, no X and things like those. Even compiling
two or three kernels at a time don't consume my RAM. What I try to
explain is that the swap is not really needed in my machine, since
the memory is not prone to be filled.
Well, I haven't notice any change in performance, and the swap
area is *never* used. That contradicts what I've read about that, no
matter your free RAM size, a bit of swap is always used. That is not
my case, definitely.
So my question is: should I use a swap-area for improving
performance (or whatever else), or should I use those precious bytes
to improving my porn collection }:))? Seriously: I don't understand
how the swap works, I don't know if the swap area is used only when
RAM is exhausted or when the free RAM goes low beyond some point,
etc... I've read (just took a look) the kernel archives about swap
and it haven't light me O:))
Thanks a lot :)
Raśl
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