James and all, Oh. I have to admit - you lost me after: > Um. It sounds like you've misunderstood the 4G/4G split. Terribly afraid I'm a 'end user' of this OS, not a person equipped with the skills necessary to understand all of the ins and outs. But thanks for the correction! cya, Joey --Joey Kelley, Fedora Newbie-- "If David beat Goliath, Linux should kick Microsofts butt!" Quoting James Wilkinson <james@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>: > Joey Kelley wrote: > > I was going over the specs of FC2 a while ago, and in FC2 the > maximum > > size of the RAM that can be accessed is 4 GB, with an additional 4 GB of > swap > > partition (to quote a mac term, Virtual Ram or the linux version of the > Windows > > temporary files) > > Um. It sounds like you've misunderstood the 4G/4G split. > > The maximum memory Fedora can use is the maximum that the underlying > kernel can use. On x64-64, that should be 1 TB = 1024 GB IF you can find > the hardware to support it! On x86, that is 64 GB with Intel's PAE mode. > > It also supports up to 32 swap files or partitions, each of up to 2 GB > on x86 (according to man mkswap). (No idea what the x86-64 limit is: the > underlying hardware can't use more than 1024 TB of virtual memory...) > > The 4G/4G split is to do with how an individual process views memory. > There's a part of the chip called the Memory Management Unit which, > together with the kernel's virtual memory subsystem, selects 4K pages > from real memory, swap, and other places to make up 4 GB for the process > and 4 GB of easily-accessible RAM for kernel mode. > > Hope this helps, > > James. > -- > E-mail address: james | actor: (n) a piece of scenery that has the audacity > @westexe.demon.co.uk | to move once lit.