Implications of large memory systems
John F Carr
jfc at athena.mit.edu
Wed Mar 29 09:06:48 AEST 1989
In article <13433 at steinmetz.ge.com> davidsen at crdos1.UUCP (bill davidsen) writes:
>If the machine is a
>workstation rather than being used for timesharing (many schools try to
>put 32 users on an 8MB Sun), the total memory in use is probably 4-12MB.
>Do most users need that in a workstation?
Yes. At the moment, I am using about 27 Meg of virtual memory split between
two workstations (4M & 6M RAM; 16 M swap). Processes:
Saber C (a C interpreter running under X): ~7 M
Emacs + subprocesses 2.5 M
2 large computational programs 2 M
4 pairs of (xterm+csh) 1.1 M
X Server .7 M
rrn+Pnews .5 M
random small utilities, subshells
(plus kernel & system processes)
That is the static load; I also run compilers, the program I am working on,
read mail, write files, etc...
I find I can't fit all the programs I want to run into 16MB. I _don't_
have access to a large, fast machine for computation. Instead, I use X
windows to run two workstations from a single display, and accept that
overhead.
--
John Carr "When they turn the pages of history,
jfc at Athena.mit.edu When these days have passed long ago,
bloom-beacon! Will they read of us with sadness
athena.mit.edu!jfc For the seeds that we let grow?" --Neil Peart
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