BobRoyall
Posts: 9
Joined: 5/7/2001 From: Denver, CO Status: offline
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quote:
Originally posted by 5thRecon:
What you are suggesting is to reset the VM settings to a Min Setting (value) of 2.5 times your existing RAM and leave the Max Setting on "No Maximum"?
...I have heard that you should try and keep the min and max numbers the same but then again, I am not a computer wiz...
Any advice?
If you have the drive space, set the minimum to a number high enough to cover most of your program requirements. Leave the maximum at "no limit" so the computer can expand the swapfile if it becomes necessary. That way you don't have to take the time to increase the setting, reboot, etc. With Norton Speedisk, the swapfile is defragged and moved to the front of the hard drive space for fastest access. You hate to have to run Speedisk every time you change the swapfile size.
Not sure how large to set the minimum swapfile size? Dozens of utilities will monitor ram free, ram used, swapfile usage and size, etc... Set your minimum swapfile at 100mb and run one of those programs for a few days and see how big the swapfile gets. Norton System Doctor is the monitor I use. When you see the max swapfile size grow larger than your settings, increase your swapfile settings and try again. After 2-3 days of normal use, you should have a minimum swapfile size setting that you can defrag and use with minimal hard drive thrashing. And with the maximum set to "no limit", you're still covered for those unique situations where you use more memory than you would in normal computer use. :)
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