Use "swapon -s" to determine if you have a swapfile or partition in use. If that isn't listed, try "swapon /dev/hda6" to turn it on and use the previous command to see if it is running. If not, recreate your swapfile with "mkswap /dev/hda6" and then use "swapon /dev/hda6" Hope that helps... Steven On Wed, 19 Jan 2005 13:44:53 +0100, Duncan Lithgow <duncan@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > I've recently had a few applications get killed off by full memory. So I > looked at System Monitor and it says: > Used Memory 218MB of 502MB > Used swap 0MB of 0MB > > Somethings wrong right? I've checked fstab and it looks normal ( > /dev/hda6 swap swap defaults 0 0 ) but I've obviously done something > wrong if my system can't even see my swap partition. > > I can't find anything helpful for 'fedora configure swap' 'fedora test > swap' on google. > > ideas? > > Duncan > > -- > fedora-list mailing list > fedora-list@xxxxxxxxxx > To unsubscribe: http://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/fedora-list >