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#1
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Maximum virtual memory size
I am aware that the optimal page file sizes are 1.5 to 3 times actual RAM but
I was under the impression that the maximum XP 32-bit could manage was 4Gb. Has this upper limit been removed or increased? I came across a Dell Latitude laptop with 3.5 Gb RAM accessible to Windows XP Pro SP3, where Dell had set the pagefile to min 2Gb, max 4Gb, yet the system recommended size was 5.25Gb or thereabouts in line with the 1.5x factor. Is there any point in increasing the max to beyond 4Gb unless Windows XP SP3 can manage it? |
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#2
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Maximum virtual memory size
The optimal page file is the "system managed size."
You could set your page file to 100 GB if you like...Windows will only use as much as it needs. Finally: Paging is much slower than RAM. If you think that increasing your page file will somehow improve your computer's performance, you are incorrect. --- Leonard Grey Errare humanum est Colin wrote: I am aware that the optimal page file sizes are 1.5 to 3 times actual RAM but I was under the impression that the maximum XP 32-bit could manage was 4Gb. Has this upper limit been removed or increased? I came across a Dell Latitude laptop with 3.5 Gb RAM accessible to Windows XP Pro SP3, where Dell had set the pagefile to min 2Gb, max 4Gb, yet the system recommended size was 5.25Gb or thereabouts in line with the 1.5x factor. Is there any point in increasing the max to beyond 4Gb unless Windows XP SP3 can manage it? |
#3
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Maximum virtual memory size
The optimal page file is the "system managed size."
You could set your page file to 100 GB if you like...Windows will only use as much as it needs. Finally: Paging is much slower than RAM. If you think that increasing your page file will somehow improve your computer's performance, you are incorrect. --- Leonard Grey Errare humanum est Colin wrote: I am aware that the optimal page file sizes are 1.5 to 3 times actual RAM but I was under the impression that the maximum XP 32-bit could manage was 4Gb. Has this upper limit been removed or increased? I came across a Dell Latitude laptop with 3.5 Gb RAM accessible to Windows XP Pro SP3, where Dell had set the pagefile to min 2Gb, max 4Gb, yet the system recommended size was 5.25Gb or thereabouts in line with the 1.5x factor. Is there any point in increasing the max to beyond 4Gb unless Windows XP SP3 can manage it? |
#4
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Maximum virtual memory size
Colin wrote:
I am aware that the optimal page file sizes are 1.5 to 3 times actual RAM but I was under the impression that the maximum XP 32-bit could manage was 4Gb. Has this upper limit been removed or increased? I came across a Dell Latitude laptop with 3.5 Gb RAM accessible to Windows XP Pro SP3, where Dell had set the pagefile to min 2Gb, max 4Gb, yet the system recommended size was 5.25Gb or thereabouts in line with the 1.5x factor. Is there any point in increasing the max to beyond 4Gb unless Windows XP SP3 can manage it? With that much RAM the need for the pagefile won't be that great, you may not need a pagefile for anything more than virtual addresses for the applications, just set the pagefile to System Managed and forget about it. As to the usable pagefile size, with PAE enabled 32-bit NT versions can have a maximum of 16 pagefiles of 16 terabytes each! John |
#5
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Maximum virtual memory size
Colin wrote:
I am aware that the optimal page file sizes are 1.5 to 3 times actual RAM but I was under the impression that the maximum XP 32-bit could manage was 4Gb. Has this upper limit been removed or increased? I came across a Dell Latitude laptop with 3.5 Gb RAM accessible to Windows XP Pro SP3, where Dell had set the pagefile to min 2Gb, max 4Gb, yet the system recommended size was 5.25Gb or thereabouts in line with the 1.5x factor. Is there any point in increasing the max to beyond 4Gb unless Windows XP SP3 can manage it? With that much RAM the need for the pagefile won't be that great, you may not need a pagefile for anything more than virtual addresses for the applications, just set the pagefile to System Managed and forget about it. As to the usable pagefile size, with PAE enabled 32-bit NT versions can have a maximum of 16 pagefiles of 16 terabytes each! John |
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