eddjp@edi386.UUCP ( Dewey Paciaffi ) (03/15/91)
In article <5912@awdprime.UUCP> ransom@perelandra.austin.ibm.com (Jeff Peek) writes: -In article <BFLS.91Mar14152256@cain.anu.edu.au> bfls@cain.anu.edu.au (Barbara La Scala) writes: ->In fact according to the output from ps, the only process which is using a ->significant amount of memory is the swapper, which is using around 50% of ->memory! Is this normal? (I can't find any info on "swapper" in InfoExplorer). -The swapper is a kernel process running in kernel mode. -The data that ps is displaying -is actually the size of the kernel segment. Now, why the kernel is so -large depends -on what subsystem you had running, i.e., TCP/IP, NFS, SNA, etc. -Also, it depends on what level of OS you are running, i.e., 3001, etal. I have a Model 320, 16 MB memory, running TCP/IP and NFS. I'm still running 3002 ;-). My ps reports that the swapper runs about 8MB most of the time. Are you saying that it's my kernel that is actually taking up half of my real memory? Does anybody know why this is? Is this going to be fixed? How big is the swapper on a 64 MB system? -- Dewey Paciaffi ...!uunet!edi386!eddjp