Mikuro
Crotchety UI Nitpicker
Back in OS 9, I used RAM disks a lot for multimedia work. I gave up on even trying with OS X, since I barely had enough RAM to run the OS itself, let alone a disk. It'd just get paged right to VM, thus reducing speed.
But now I've upgraded my RAM to 1GB, which should be plenty.
I've tried both Esperance DV and Rambunctious, but with both tools, I find that it's reading from (and for some reason, writing to) the disk more often than not. What the heck?
It's not a matter of there not being enough RAM. I created a 190MB RAM disk when I had 500MB of free RAM (as reported by Activity Monitor). I copied a movie to it. No problem. Then I tried playing it, and....it kept reading from the disk. So it seems that despite the fact that my system has more RAM than it knows what to do with, my RAM disk is being stored in virtual memory. So again I ask: What the heck?!?
Is there any way to tell the OS to always keep a process in RAM, and never, ever page its memory to disk? I'd like to have OS X act like it has 768MB of RAM, and simply reserve the remaining 256MB for the RAM disk.
Am I asking too much? Is there any way to use RAM disks effectively for multimedia in OS X?
But now I've upgraded my RAM to 1GB, which should be plenty.
I've tried both Esperance DV and Rambunctious, but with both tools, I find that it's reading from (and for some reason, writing to) the disk more often than not. What the heck?
It's not a matter of there not being enough RAM. I created a 190MB RAM disk when I had 500MB of free RAM (as reported by Activity Monitor). I copied a movie to it. No problem. Then I tried playing it, and....it kept reading from the disk. So it seems that despite the fact that my system has more RAM than it knows what to do with, my RAM disk is being stored in virtual memory. So again I ask: What the heck?!?
Is there any way to tell the OS to always keep a process in RAM, and never, ever page its memory to disk? I'd like to have OS X act like it has 768MB of RAM, and simply reserve the remaining 256MB for the RAM disk.
Am I asking too much? Is there any way to use RAM disks effectively for multimedia in OS X?