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| start:memmanagement [2023/09/14 19:47] – peter | start:memmanagement [2023/09/14 19:48] (current) – peter | ||
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| + | DATE CHECKED THIS PAGE WAS VALID: 14/ | ||
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| On Linux systems, especially Debian some very old defaults are used. While this made sense 10-15 years ago, they are less optimal today, and changing the defaults is a very slow process since the logic is "if it aint broke don't fix it". In some ways this is very useful as little changes, so you can expect a consistent experience between versions. However sometimes there is an issue. This is one of those times. | On Linux systems, especially Debian some very old defaults are used. While this made sense 10-15 years ago, they are less optimal today, and changing the defaults is a very slow process since the logic is "if it aint broke don't fix it". In some ways this is very useful as little changes, so you can expect a consistent experience between versions. However sometimes there is an issue. This is one of those times. | ||
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| After a reboot you can check the values are accepted and you have tweaked the memory performance of the system :) | After a reboot you can check the values are accepted and you have tweaked the memory performance of the system :) | ||
| + | === Notes === | ||
| + | Notes: | ||