Originally posted by: MrChad
Let Windows manage it.
Originally posted by: MrChad
Let Windows manage it.
Originally posted by: postmortemIA
BS.. large page file that is unused is a waste of space. Especially if windows has to access it all the time.
I think you all are forgetting that VM involves a lot of heuristics; for some workloads, it just doesn't work efficiently.
BS.. large page file that is unused is a waste of space. Especially if windows has to access it all the time.
You know, automatic management of the page file is a point of dogma for all of you. I think you all are forgetting that VM involves a lot of heuristics; for some workloads, it just doesn't work efficiently. I personally hate the aggressive, I/O-heavy nature of XP, and I think that if other people don't like the way it is performing either, they might want to explore tinkering with the few knobs that are exposed.
Which HD should i designate?
Originally posted by: bendixG15
Originally posted by: MrChad
Let Windows manage it.
Originally posted by: MrChad
Let Windows manage it.
If you have another drive on another channel then you could put it on that. Otherwise, leave it on the first partition (almost always the OS partition, which is the default).Originally posted by: 94transam
Ok, so i have used page file sizes in the past, but never with this much ram. I understand the let windows manage it part.
Which HD should i designate?
Originally posted by: bersl2
You know, automatic management of the page file is a point of dogma for all of you. I think you all are forgetting that VM involves a lot of heuristics; for some workloads, it just doesn't work efficiently. I personally hate the aggressive, I/O-heavy nature of XP, and I think that if other people don't like the way it is performing either, they might want to explore tinkering with the few knobs that are exposed.
I know why you don't want people fooling with the page file: you think they're going to royally screw up and come screaming to you for help.
Originally posted by: bsobel
Because generally the person asking has no knowledge of even what memory vs the paging file is and winds up simply turning it off (bad for a number of reasons, including api's that will fail in that case).
I run a 939 AMD X2 with 2x1GB of DDR400 and haven't been using a page file for months now. The system is stable and with plenty of memory reserves even during heavy multitasking. Could you please elaborate on the problems of a no page file strategy?
Originally posted by: KAZANI
Originally posted by: bsobel
Because generally the person asking has no knowledge of even what memory vs the paging file is and winds up simply turning it off (bad for a number of reasons, including api's that will fail in that case).
I run a 939 AMD X2 with 2x1GB of DDR400 and haven't been using a page file for months now. The system is stable and with plenty of memory reserves even during heavy multitasking. Could you please elaborate on the problems of a no page file strategy?
do you think that fixing the page file size to some low value -100MB perhaps- in order to prevent unnecessary hard disk activity would be a viable option?