On Thu, 14 Oct 2004 15:10:13 +0100, Douglas Furlong <douglas.furlong@xxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > > On Thu, 2004-10-14 at 15:36 +0200, Wouter van Vliet wrote: > > > > > You left out the kernel version you use. Swap usage varies between > > > > > kernel versions. > > > > > > > > > > Mem: 515828k total, 354288k used, 161540k free, 115340k buffers > > > > > Swap: 1048568k total, 132k used, 1048436k free, 92048k cached > > > > > > > > > > This is from my FC3t2 box. > > > > > > > > > > N.Emile... > > > > > -- > > > > > > > > I'm using FC2, don't actually know :$:$ what kernel is currently > > > > active, or how to find out. These are the installed kernels (according > > > > to rpm -q kernel). > > > > > > > > kernel-2.6.5-1.358 > > > > kernel-2.6.6-1.435.2.3 > > > > kernel-2.6.8-1.521 > > > > > > > > Thanks, > > > > Wouter > > > > > > > The easiest way is with the uname command. > > > > > > uname -a will give you the lot. > > > > > > > uname -a gives: > > > > Linux ********* 2.6.6-1.435.2.3smp #1 SMP Thu Jul 1 08:36:21 EDT 2004 > > i686 i686 i386 GNU/Linux > > > > Now, what does that tell you about my swapping concerns? > > Absolutely nothing what so ever, but I never told you that I could fix > your swapping problem, I was just telling you how to find out your > kernel version. > hehe, well I wasn't referring to only you, Douglas but everybody whow as waiting for the output of uname. And i do appriciate the information you gave me. Though I've been running around in Linux World for a while now, I haven't found the time to get myself a lot further than just using it as a webserver. Anyway, you happen to know a command that like really tells me what processes are consuming memory? I know top, but no matter how close I look I cannot find all of the memory used in it's output. Thanks!