Re: Examining Swap

2005-11-04 Thread Thomas
Antony Gelberg wrote: Thomas wrote: Hello there. My debian server uses max 50% of its 1 GB ram while im looking at it, also under stress conditions. Still, if it is running for a few days, there are about 100 MB swapspace used. I dont know what is written into the swapfile. Now i ask myse

Re: Examining Swap

2005-11-04 Thread Jochen Schulz
Thomas: > > Is there a way to move the contents of the swapfile back into the (free) > mem manually? Sure: # swapoff -a && swapon -a J. -- I worry about people thinking I have lost direction. [Agree] [Disagree] signa

Re: Examining Swap

2005-11-03 Thread Carl Fink
On Thu, Nov 03, 2005 at 01:54:45PM -0800, Tony Godshall wrote: > According to Thomas, > > Hello there. > > > > > > My debian server uses max 50% of its 1 GB ram while im looking at it, > > also under stress conditions. Still, if it is running for a few days, > > there are about 100 MB swapspace

Re: Examining Swap

2005-11-03 Thread Tony Godshall
According to Thomas, > Hello there. > > > My debian server uses max 50% of its 1 GB ram while im looking at it, > also under stress conditions. Still, if it is running for a few days, > there are about 100 MB swapspace used. > > I dont know what is written into the swapfile. > Now i ask myself

Re: Examining Swap

2005-11-03 Thread Kjetil Kjernsmo
On torsdag 03 november 2005, 22:35, Thomas wrote: > Is there a way to move the contents of the swapfile back into the > (free) mem manually? I'm not positive about this, but I think you can trust the OS to do it properly. There are parameters that you can tune, but generally, if something is swa

Examining Swap

2005-11-03 Thread Thomas
Hello there. My debian server uses max 50% of its 1 GB ram while im looking at it, also under stress conditions. Still, if it is running for a few days, there are about 100 MB swapspace used. I dont know what is written into the swapfile. Now i ask myself, how i can find out whats inside of