Domain hosting, cheap domain names & web page promotion services
  

 Home

Red Hat Linux 8.0: The Official Red Hat Linux Customization Guide
PrevNext

Chapter 2. Swap Space

What is Swap Space?

Swap space in Linux is used when the amount of physical memory (RAM) is full. If the system needs more memory resources and the physical memory is full, inactive pages in memory are moved to the swap space. While swap space can help machines with a small amount of RAM, it should not be considered a replacement for more RAM. Swap space is located on hard drives, which have a slower access time than physical memory.

Swap space can be a dedicated swap partition (recommended), a swap file, or a combination of swap partitions and swap files.

The size of your swap space should be equal to twice your computer's RAM, or 32 MB, whichever amount is larger, but no more than 2048 MB (or 2 GB).


PrevHomeNext
Reverting to an ext2 File SystemUpAdding Swap Space
 

 

 

 

Website promotion and ranking services | Active-Domain.com: Domain name registration | Cheap domain registrar 

Disclaimer: For authoritative source or latest update to this documentation, please refer to http://www.redhat.com/docs/manuals/linux/

 

 
Quotes: "In real love you want the other person's good. In romantic love you want the other person."