Hi guys,
I have been having some sluggish performance recently and I'm guessing it could be something to do with memory allocation. I have been reading a few things on this board and have found that page ins/outs can have an effect on performance (although I'm still not entirely sure what it all means).
I have closed all my applications except for my browser and the activity viewer to see what is going on. My page readings on the system memory page state:
Page ins/outs 182139/247702.
I have read somewhere that if you have more page outs than ins then you have a problem. Therefore my questions are:
a. Is this actually true and what do page in/outs actually mean?
b. Will adding more RAM to my machine help? I currently own an eMac 1.25ghz with 512 RAM, running OS 10.3.5.
c. What other tips might help its performance?
d. What is the difference between inactive memory and free memory?
In addition, my applications also seem to use up a lot of VM. Could this also cause performance problems?
Thanks in advance for your time.
Ian
I have been having some sluggish performance recently and I'm guessing it could be something to do with memory allocation. I have been reading a few things on this board and have found that page ins/outs can have an effect on performance (although I'm still not entirely sure what it all means).
I have closed all my applications except for my browser and the activity viewer to see what is going on. My page readings on the system memory page state:
Page ins/outs 182139/247702.
I have read somewhere that if you have more page outs than ins then you have a problem. Therefore my questions are:
a. Is this actually true and what do page in/outs actually mean?
b. Will adding more RAM to my machine help? I currently own an eMac 1.25ghz with 512 RAM, running OS 10.3.5.
c. What other tips might help its performance?
d. What is the difference between inactive memory and free memory?
In addition, my applications also seem to use up a lot of VM. Could this also cause performance problems?
Thanks in advance for your time.
Ian