F5F Stay Refreshed Software Operating Systems Consider your needs before deciding. Disabling swap might improve performance if your system has enough RAM.

Consider your needs before deciding. Disabling swap might improve performance if your system has enough RAM.

Consider your needs before deciding. Disabling swap might improve performance if your system has enough RAM.

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Xxunidemonxx
Member
214
01-06-2025, 10:28 AM
#1
It might make sense to turn off swap given your limited RAM. With only 8GB available and no clear plan for upgrades, keeping swap disabled could help avoid performance issues. Your SSD setup also supports this approach.
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Xxunidemonxx
01-06-2025, 10:28 AM #1

It might make sense to turn off swap given your limited RAM. With only 8GB available and no clear plan for upgrades, keeping swap disabled could help avoid performance issues. Your SSD setup also supports this approach.

A
Askir152
Member
63
01-09-2025, 06:39 PM
#2
Let it stay as is. You might consider shrinking it, but I believe keeping it unchanged is better.
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Askir152
01-09-2025, 06:39 PM #2

Let it stay as is. You might consider shrinking it, but I believe keeping it unchanged is better.

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lolcatswin77
Junior Member
10
01-09-2025, 06:49 PM
#3
Consider swapping on a hard drive or perform a minimal swap. Removing it leads to unusual crashes or bugs. The smallest size that still allows the computer to sleep is 400MB. Disable indexing, ensure scheduled defragmentation is off (obviously), and make sure TRIM is enabled.
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lolcatswin77
01-09-2025, 06:49 PM #3

Consider swapping on a hard drive or perform a minimal swap. Removing it leads to unusual crashes or bugs. The smallest size that still allows the computer to sleep is 400MB. Disable indexing, ensure scheduled defragmentation is off (obviously), and make sure TRIM is enabled.

I
IsacV1
Junior Member
4
01-09-2025, 08:30 PM
#4
Swag matters, you can't simply disable it.
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IsacV1
01-09-2025, 08:30 PM #4

Swag matters, you can't simply disable it.

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axsthetiic
Member
218
01-15-2025, 03:18 PM
#5
Give it a shot and check how it performs for you. It’s been turned off since Windows XP without any problems. Systems with 4GB, 8GB and now 16GB have all functioned correctly. Yes, I also play BF3/4 without any issues.
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axsthetiic
01-15-2025, 03:18 PM #5

Give it a shot and check how it performs for you. It’s been turned off since Windows XP without any problems. Systems with 4GB, 8GB and now 16GB have all functioned correctly. Yes, I also play BF3/4 without any issues.

P
Platooie
Member
83
01-20-2025, 08:32 PM
#6
Ensure an HDD swap is installed. No swaps lead to crashes. I attempted this on my laptop using an Eos model, but the result wasn't successful.
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Platooie
01-20-2025, 08:32 PM #6

Ensure an HDD swap is installed. No swaps lead to crashes. I attempted this on my laptop using an Eos model, but the result wasn't successful.

S
sirus13579
Junior Member
9
01-20-2025, 10:18 PM
#7
Which operating system are you planning to use?
S
sirus13579
01-20-2025, 10:18 PM #7

Which operating system are you planning to use?

D
DanielEmpire
Posting Freak
781
01-22-2025, 06:51 AM
#8
Is this running on a Linux system? I’m not familiar with how swapping works there, but I usually avoid it unless necessary.
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DanielEmpire
01-22-2025, 06:51 AM #8

Is this running on a Linux system? I’m not familiar with how swapping works there, but I usually avoid it unless necessary.

I
Idenr
Junior Member
10
01-22-2025, 10:48 AM
#9
Swapping functions similarly to virtual memory.
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Idenr
01-22-2025, 10:48 AM #9

Swapping functions similarly to virtual memory.

B
Beamitx
Member
58
01-22-2025, 11:54 AM
#10
That's correct, I recall it well... it's been a while since I worked with Linux.
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Beamitx
01-22-2025, 11:54 AM #10

That's correct, I recall it well... it's been a while since I worked with Linux.

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