Difference between revisions of "Linux swap space"
(New page: In Linux, '''swap''' is space on the hard disk that is reserved to be used as virtual memory. ==swappiness== How aggressively your computer uses its swap space is determined by the va...) |
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Revision as of 04:56, 30 October 2013
In Linux, swap is space on the hard disk that is reserved to be used as virtual memory.
swappiness
How aggressively your computer uses its swap space is determined by the value for "swappiness", which is in a range of 0 to 100. A setting of 100 will aggressively move processes, while a setting of 0 will swap only to avoid an out of memory condition.
Creating a swap file
As an example, to add 1GB of swap to your computer/server, follow these steps (as superuser/root):
- Create the file to be used for swap:
fallocate -l 1G /mnt/1GB.swap
Or, if fallocate
fails or is not installed, run the following command:
dd if=/dev/zero of=/mnt/1GB.swap bs=1024 count=1048576
- Format the file for swap:
mkswap /mnt/1GB.swap
- Add the file to the system as a swap file:
swapon /mnt/1GB.swap
- Add the following line to your
/etc/fstab
file to make the change permanent:
/mnt/1GB.swap none swap sw 0 0
- To change the swappiness edit
/etc/sysctl.conf
and add the following line:
vm.swappiness=10
Start with a value of 10 and increase if needed. A typical default value for swappiness is 60. The higher the number, the more often swap is utilized. How much this affects performance depends on how your memory is being used, so experiment to find an optimal value.
- Check that the swap file was created:
sudo swapon -s
Finally, reboot your computer/server to ensure that the changes go into effect.