• lemmyvore
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    7 months ago

    Um, you really need to read the entire phrase and not pick out only what you want from it. 😃

    Swap can make a system slower to OOM kill, since it provides another, slower source of memory to thrash on in out of memory situations

    It means that if you try to use it as a source of memory, when you run out of actual RAM it will make your system almost completely unresponsive due to disk thrash, instead of allowing the kernel to just kill the process that’s eating your RAM. So you’ll just end up hard-booting system.

    • wmassingham@lemmy.world
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      7 months ago

      Yes, and that’s a good thing if you don’t want it to start killing processes. You have that extra time/space to deal with the out-of-memory condition yourself.

      Or you can ignore that condition and continue using the system in a degraded state, with swap as “disk RAM”.

      • lemmyvore
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        7 months ago

        Like I said, the system will be almost completely unresponsive due to disk access being several orders of magnitude lower than RAM and allocation thrashing… you won’t be able to do much, the mouse, keyboard and display will react extremely slowly. There may be situations where you’d prefer this to an OOM kill, for example if you’re running a test or experiment where you’d rather have it finish even if it takes a very long time rather than lose the data. But if you’re a regular desktop user or server admin you’ll probably just reboot.