I have a Dell laptop too, with sata drives. I use it with vmware player to run virtual machines, many servers (http, mysql, etc... for tests) and I had problems when hibernate machine because my swaps were being used. I think, for normal user (web, openoffice, and so on), you need, at least for hibernate, 1xRAM swap space, if along the time you'll need more, you can add to your swap space "swapfiles" with no problem (at least I have 1 partition for swap plus 1 swapfile). All depends on the type of aplication you will use on your laptop. Regards El Mar, 12 de Diciembre de 2006, 14:56, Marc Schwartz escribió: > Dotan Cohen wrote: >> I've just got a Dell laptop with 2GB RAM. 2*2.5=5GB of swap? This >> seems like a bit much, but I'd like some opinions on the matter. Also, >> I've heard that the swap should be as close to the center of the disk >> as possible- does that mean that I should use hda1 as swap? Opinions >> welcome. Thanks. > > I have 2Gb of RAM on my Dell 5150 (3.2 Ghz P4). > > I have 1 Gb of swap set up and I as I type this post, 176 Kb (yes Kb) is > in use. Given this, I am not sure that the location of the swap space > is critical. > > Even when running heavy analyses using R (http://www.r-project.org/), I > rarely see much swap being used. > > BTW, my swap is also encrypted (along with /home, /var and /tmp) using > dm-crypt/LUKS and I don't see any notable performance hit using a 7200 > RPM 60 Gb HD. > > The old guideline of using 2x RAM for swap is, I don't believe, > applicable with this much physical RAM installed and seems to me to be > a waste of HD space. > > HTH, > > Marc Schwartz > > -- > fedora-list mailing list > fedora-list@xxxxxxxxxx > To unsubscribe: https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/fedora-list >