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No, Linux didn't eat your RAM, here's what's actually happening
As for swap, Linux relies on it as more or less a safety valve. When RAM fills up, the kernel first evicts cache, then compresses anonymous pages if zswap or zram is active, before finally writing ...
I'm going to get a 100GB hard drive Saturday and I was thinking of dividing it up so I could put multiple versions of linux on it. I want to put just one swap file on the front of the drive and ...
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