Re: size of "disk cache"
Re: size of "disk cache"
- Subject: Re: size of "disk cache"
- From: Uli Kusterer <email@hidden>
- Date: Sat, 23 Jun 2007 11:24:53 +0200
On 23.06.2007, at 08:52, Calvin (Yu-Hui) Liu wrote:
I don't have enough experience on Mac so far. I'm not quite sure if
the
"Disk Cache" here refers to "swap partition" as Linux. In my
experience
on Linux, I was told to use as same size as the physical memory - 1GB
swap for 1GB memory. "32K for every MB" - it seems to be too small...
What do you think?
This info is for Mac OS 9 and earlier. OS 9 isn't a Linux, it's a
pre-Darwin MacOS (what you get when you run a "classic" application
on a PowerPC Mac). So, this isn't really on topic for this mailing
list, and you may wanna look for another venue to ask your question.
That said, I'll try to provide an answer:
The equivalent to Linux's "swap" partition would be "Virtual
Memory", which is set up separately, and generally is your physical
amount of RAM +x. Since OS 9 is a rather "old" generation of OS
design, it didn't remap memory the way Linux did it either. I think
the maximum VM amount was 2x amount of RAM.
Disk Cache is usually built into hard disks themselves these days,
though OS X does some buffering itself.
Anyway, unless you're into retro computing or have customers or
users in educational or DTP settings that haven't been able to move
to OS X, you'll just want to ignore any "pre-OS X" information.
Classic MacOS is a completely different operating system than Mac OS
X. Their only commonalities are that they support a number of the
same protocols and file formats, and that some (mostly user-level)
applications were ported over. Apple is no longer selling Macs able
to run OS 9 or earlier, nor is it selling OS 9 itself. It's a dead
product.
Oh yeah: OS X doesn't have a swap partition by default. It just
uses the boot volume for swap space. Though you can find instructions
on the web how to screw with the config files to get a dedicated swap
partition. But that stuff isn't widely used, and not supported by
Apple (at least for "regular" Mac OS X -- not sure about Mac OS X
Server, and I guess there's some Darwin users who do a separate swap
partition, too).
Cheers,
-- M. Uli Kusterer
http://www.zathras.de
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