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Date:      Wed, 21 Apr 1999 16:42:29 -0500 (CDT)
From:      Christopher Palmer <cpalmer@jig.ordway.org>
To:        "Crist J. Clark" <cjc@cc942873-a.ewndsr1.nj.home.com>
Cc:        FreeBSD Questions <freebsd-questions@FreeBSD.ORG>
Subject:   Re: Performance Question
Message-ID:  <Pine.BSF.4.10.9904211636090.6128-100000@jig.ordway.org>
In-Reply-To: <199904191956.PAA08664@cc942873-a.ewndsr1.nj.home.com>

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On Mon, 19 Apr 1999, Crist J. Clark wrote:

If you do a lot of swapping (high memory requirements or small amounts of
RAM or both), it's better to have your swap partition on a different
physical disk than your main data parition. This way, the head on one
drive isn't alternating between reading/writing swap and reading/writing
data.

I have a NeXTStation whose internal HDD is small, so I installed the OS on
a larger external one, and set the internal one to be exclusively swap.
Performance improved noticeably.

My Linux system has a similar situation: swap and / are on one disk, and
/home (where most of my data reads and writes happen) is on a second disk.
Same thing: better performance than if everything were on one disk.

I think swap is a great use for those old disks. I hate seeing resources
go to waste.


Christopher Palmer
Assistant Systems Administrator, Ordway Music Theatre
cpalmer@jig.ordway.org



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