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Windows evil
Gallstaff - Nov 2, 2003

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 dibz Nov 3, 2003
I dont remember if you can or not in 2k, but comparing it to win95 makes no sense, 2k is based on the NT core. Win95 isn't.

 dnguyen800 Nov 3, 2003
you can do it in win2k, just follow most of gameboy900's instructions and figure out the rest.

 mal Nov 3, 2003
In 2K it's probably in admin tools somewhere...

Thanks for the explanation gameboy900. :thumbs-up:

 gameboy900 Nov 4, 2003
BTW you should keep the initial and max at the same amount if you're putting the swap file on a partition that has other files on it. But like in my case where it's the only file on the partition fragmentation is not a problem. The main reason for keeping the initial size smaller than the max and letting it expand as needed is that until it does expand you have less swap file fragmentation (internally). This means it uses the swap file more efficiently.

 antime Nov 4, 2003
My Computer/Properties/Advanced/Performance Options.../Change...

Set the pagefile size to your largest working set, anything more is wasted.

 racketboy Nov 4, 2003

  
	
	
Originally posted by gameboy900@Nov 4, 2003 @ 07:25 AM

BTW you should keep the initial and max at the same amount if you're putting the swap file on a partition that has other files on it. But like in my case where it's the only file on the partition fragmentation is not a problem. The main reason for keeping the initial size smaller than the max and letting it expand as needed is that until it does expand you have less swap file fragmentation (internally). This means it uses the swap file more efficiently.


so if I have it on a separate partition, I shouldn't keep it a constant size?

I've read otherwise

 gameboy900 Nov 4, 2003
If it's on it's own partition you can just set the max size to the size of that partition and the initial size to the amount of ram you have. Those settings should be good enough.

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