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Date:      Sun, 20 Aug 2017 22:08:00 +0200
From:      Stefan Esser <se@freebsd.org>
To:        Greg 'groggy' Lehey <grog@FreeBSD.org>, tech-lists <tech-lists@zyxst.net>
Cc:        freebsd-current@freebsd.org
Subject:   Re: swapfile query
Message-ID:  <5de1cb15-0147-e17b-d5f9-3feca87ec4ff@freebsd.org>
In-Reply-To: <20170819233919.GD91313@eureka.lemis.com>
References:  <77fdd002-2873-eb67-c851-0127ae3141b6@zyxst.net> <20170819233919.GD91313@eureka.lemis.com>

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Am 20.08.17 um 01:39 schrieb Greg 'groggy' Lehey:
>> 3. should total swap be 1x 2x or some other multiple of RAM these days?
> 
> It never needed to be.  The only issue is that if you want processor
> dumps, you once needed a swap partition (and not a swap file) at least
> marginally larger than memory.  With compressed dumps, that
> requirement is relaxed, but I suspect that a 4 GB partition could be
> too small.

Well, no, it (2x RAM) used to be needed at a time ... ;-)

The VAX supported paging, but did not use a multi-level page table as
most CPUs do today. There was a linear list of page addresses per
process, and new page allocations could lead to a situation, where
there was no free space in this list. This required a kind of garbage
collection run, which was implemented by swapping out all processes
and starting with a clean state. This required 2 times RAM configured
as swap, to prevent a dead-lock (when a new page needed to be allocated
to complete the swap-out).

This MMU was used in at least all VAX 11-7xx, the µVAX 2 and µVAX 3
and thus in many of the machines used to run BSD back in the 80s ...

And thus, swap of at least 2 times RAM used to be not just a best
practice, but a strict requirement for stable operation of these
machines.

Regards, STefan



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