i heard that if a system have >=512MB of RAM size, paging file might not even be required... is this true and if it is not then what is the recomended value of paging file for a 512MB of RAM?
It really depends on your activites and your total system RAM. I've got 2GB and I had mine set to 256MB, but I bumped it to 512 for Doom 3, yet it STILL nagged me about a paging file. :\
thanks tarun... i guess i will set it to the same value as the RAM for the time being... will it be alright?
thanks tarun... i guess i will set it to the same value as the RAM for the time being... will it be alright?
How much do you have right now? What all do you use on your pc? (Gaming, photo editing, etc)
Rule of thumb is 1.5x the system memory.
edit> oh I messed up - I originally typed 1.5x (which is the rule of thumb) but in parenthesis I put the explanation for MY rule of thumb, which is 2.5x -- so that your memory can be 100% full twice, and then room to spare)
edit> After 1024 MB of RAM though, you don't need a paging file anymore, at all, ever, period, (unless you're doing some professional work with high resolution images or movie editing or something) and you can safely ignore all warnings about the paging file (like Photoshop, etc).
edit> It's also helpful to put paging files on all drives except for the system drive.
The default setting is good enough for most users.
If you have 512+ mb RAM, then you probably have enough for most things.
I have 256 mb RAM, it is not all that much, but it works okay for me.
Set both options (minimum size and maximum size) to the same value for added performance -- with a static setting, Windows won't ever have to resize the paging file, it'll be the same size all the time. Also, try to stay within powers of two. For 512 MB of RAM, 1024 MB is great! If you want to do 1.5x rule as described above, then that'd be 768. I recommend 1024 though.
Set both options (minimum size and maximum size) to the same value for added performance -- with a static setting, Windows won't ever have to resize the paging file, it'll be the same size all the time. Also, try to stay within powers of two. For 512 MB of RAM, 1024 MB is great! If you want to do 1.5x rule as described above, then that'd be 768. I recommend 1024 though.
i just feel it is a waste of disk space... even though my free space on both drive are a lot...
and i heard that Windows uses pagingfile when RAM are used up... is this true?
not a waste of space -- free space is not for saving, it's for using.
Yes, Windows and all subsequent win32 apps, use the pagefile extensively (even when RAM is not all used up). Setting it to a static value that is 1.5x or 2x your RAM is a great idea.
not a waste of space -- free space is not for saving, it's for using.
haha... maybe you are right...
Yes, Windows and all subsequent win32 apps, use the pagefile extensively (even when RAM is not all used up).
oh... i see i see...
Setting it to a static value that is 1.5x or 2x your RAM is a great idea.
i used a static pagingfile... 1.5x the size of my RAM...