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At 23:59 17/01/2004, Robert Watson wrote: >I suspect that the /. effect has gotten easier to carry >over time in part because a lot of the clients are higher bandwidth than >they were before -- if you have moderate size files being tranfered, lots >of long-lived slow connections take up a lot more memory than short-lived >ones. Actually, this raises an interesting point -- if 1. There is a significant amount of network traffic, 2. There is memory pressure, and 3. There are several runnable processes, it might be a good idea to give scheduling priority to the oldest process, in the hope that it will complete and free its memory. Colin Percival _______________________________________________ freebsd-chat@freebsd.org mailing list http://lists.freebsd.org/mailman/listinfo/freebsd-chat To unsubscribe, send any mail to "freebsd-chat-unsubscribe@freebsd.org"