Dear Edson Manners,
Thanx for your response
Edson Manners wrote:
>You may have done too much work in this case. I simply use the 'top'
>command. If, under normal circumstances, you ar using swap memory then I
>usually think it it time to upgrade. You know that you really need to
>upgrade if you
Dear Alexey Fadyushin,
Thanx for your response.
Alexey Fadyushin wrote:
>Did you consider the "free" command?
>On the line marked "-/+ buffers" it shows the amounts of free RAM and
>RAM used by applications. When this line shows that the amount of used
...
free shows that I have a
Did you consider the "free" command?
On the line marked "-/+ buffers" it shows the amounts of free RAM and
RAM used by applications. When this line shows that the amount of used
RAM is near the amount of the installed RAM you may consider the
installation of additional RAM. During the normal operat
Dear List.
I did not find any interface to search this list, so please
pardon me if this question has already been asked.
I have Redhat 8.0 installed on a machine which has 128 MB RAM
and 40 GB hard disk space.
How do I determine that my system is running low on RAM memory?
Meaning which particu