I'm running Win7 Ultimate 64bit with 8GB of RAM. Is it necessary to set a specific number for the pagefile.sys? Right now I have it set to "No paging file".
Please advise.
Thanks all.
Back to the original question, Windows likes to see a page file. There is absolutely no reputable source (a real testing facility) that has reported any gains from disabling the page file. If you find one, link it here. If the idea is to save disk space then set a small minimum and watch your usage. Even though you have 8Gb, you should set your system to use a page file and let Windows manage it. Current versions of Windows have memory management figured out.
However how can you not see the performance benefit of keeping everything in RAM vs having somethings accessed from a much much slower pagefile?
Who said otherwise? Not me. So of course running from RAM is better. That is why the very first thing I said was necessary for the best environment is a bunch of RAM.
Some may think 3 to 4Gb is no longer "a bunch", but it is more than enough for most people, in a properly designed and balanced system coupled with a decent horsepower graphics card and an adequate CPU. A good graphics solution is a necessity in today's graphics intensive computing world. Almost everything we do is through or with graphics. With a decent graphics card, the CPU can hand off (remove out of system RAM) many more tasks and much more quickly than if using an entry level card, or worse, on-board graphics that "shares" a significant chunk of RAM. And it takes very little CPU horsepower to hand off tasks.
3 - 4 Gb is today's "sweet spot", even for most 64-bit systems. Beyond 4Gb and the return on your money is minimal. Less than 3Gb and the performance loss is significant - primarily because the system has to use and wait on the page file more frequently. If you watch your Memory Usage in Task Manager, it is hard to get it above 3Gb doing "normal" computing tasks, even with many windows open.
I currently have open several browser sessions and 10 tabs, MailWasher Pro Beta, and a 24 page Word doc and only using 1.36Gb of my 8Gb. I am no where needing the page file, but my performance is not hindered because there is a page file either.
Now, if you already have a really good graphics card, adequate case cooling and a quality power supply with enough headroom for more RAM, and you are running a 64-bit OS, I don't see where more RAM will hurt anything but your wallet.
Back in Win 95 days it was too costly to consider disabling the pagefile as RAM was too expensive. That is no longer the case (at least for me).
And 128Mb systems were common and 256Mb of total RAM was something to brag about. A decent size "swap file" was essential and you would not consider disabling it. That's how the old rule of thumb 1.5 times the RAM for the page file size came about. That rule is still used today, though it is outdated. Not only because RAM is much larger and faster, but hard drives are much faster too.
seekermeister said:
I often find that the pagefile is not very active in my typical operations. Putting a small partititon for the pagefile has no impact on drive space, because it is so small.
Exactly. If you are crowded on drive space, it is time to uninstall unused programs, or buy a bigger drive.