Disable Chrome cache

Derek10

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Hi

I want, for the sake of my netbook's battery, hard disk defrag, etc.... to disable the Google Chrome cache as it is writing to the HDD and therefore using my netbook's battery.

Is that possible? or shoud I change to Firefox/Opera for the netbook???

Many thanks :)
 

My Computer

Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
Custom
OS
Windows 7 Ultimate 64-bit SP1
CPU
Intel Celeron G530
Motherboard
Gigabyte GA-H61M-S2-B3
Memory
2 GB DDR3 Kingston 1333 (1066)
Graphics Card(s)
POV Nvidia Geforce GT530
Sound Card
Onboard
Monitor(s) Displays
Samsung SyncMaster S19B150
Screen Resolution
1366x768
Hard Drives
Laptop HDD TOSHIBA MK3265GSX
PSU
Generic 500W
Cooling
Stock
Keyboard
Logitech S 510 Wireless
Mouse
IBM MO28UO
Internet Speed
30 mbps
Try with a modified shortcut to chrome.exe?

"chrome.exe" --disk-cache-size=1 --media-cache-size=1
 

My Computer

Computer type
PC/Desktop
OS
Microsoft Windows 10 Professional / Windows 7 Professional
CPU
Intel i5-3570
Motherboard
Lenovo Mahobay
Memory
16GB DDR3
Graphics Card(s)
AMD Radeon HD 7850 2GB
Sound Card
(1) Realtek HD Audio (2) AMD HD Audio
Monitor(s) Displays
LG LS192WS
Screen Resolution
1440 x 900 @ 32bit color
Hard Drives
(1) SUV300S37A/120G (2) ST3500413AS SATA Disk Device AHCI mode enabled.
PSU
Corsair HX620
Case
Thermaltake V4 Black Edition
Cooling
Cooler Master Hyper 212 + Artic Silver 5 on CPU/GPU
Keyboard
Dell SK-8115
Mouse
Razer Copperhead with MAPED mat (awesome!)
Internet Speed
100 Mbps up/down
Browser
Chrome
Umm...sorry but thats is just foolish. Disabling the cache will inflict more battery usage then saving. I/O over the network is a lot slower, and requires more processing then local I/O. Downloading the same images and other files (CSS, JS) with every page load will take more battery power then reading from the hard drive.
 

My Computer

Computer type
PC/Desktop
Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
Alienware Aurora ALX R4
OS
Windows 10 Pro (x64)
CPU
Intel Core i7-3930K (3.2GHz - 4.5GHz)
Motherboard
Alienware Aurora-R4 x79
Memory
4x Samsung 4GB PC3-12800 DDR3 (16GB 1600MHz)
Graphics Card(s)
Nvidia Geforce GTX 690
Sound Card
SteelSeries Siberia Elite
Monitor(s) Displays
Dell UltraSharp U3011
Screen Resolution
2560x1600
Hard Drives
Samsung 850 Pro 256 GB, Seagate 1TB Desktop Hybrid HDD, 2x Western Digital 4TB Green HDD
PSU
875W Some Dell PSU <.<
Case
Alienware Aurora ALX
Cooling
Custom Liquid Cooling (EK CPU & GPU blocks) dual EK 480RAD
Keyboard
Logitech G710+ Mechanical
Mouse
Logitech G700s
Internet Speed
Verizon Fios (50 mbps average)
Other Info
Server: Intel NUC D54250WYK: i5-4250U, 16GB, 256 GB mSATA, Windows Server 2012 R2
Try with a modified shortcut to chrome.exe?

"chrome.exe" --disk-cache-size=1 --media-cache-size=1

Thanks but those flasg don't seem to work here Chrome 21 dev :(

Umm...sorry but thats is just foolish. Disabling the cache will inflict more battery usage then saving. I/O over the network is a lot slower, and requires more processing then local I/O. Downloading the same images and other files (CSS, JS) with every page load will take more battery power then reading from the hard drive.

I thought Chrome or any browser stored those data on RAM for an session so it wouldn't download again unless restarted (thats why it uses lots of ram when many tabs opened, I think).
 

My Computer

Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
Custom
OS
Windows 7 Ultimate 64-bit SP1
CPU
Intel Celeron G530
Motherboard
Gigabyte GA-H61M-S2-B3
Memory
2 GB DDR3 Kingston 1333 (1066)
Graphics Card(s)
POV Nvidia Geforce GT530
Sound Card
Onboard
Monitor(s) Displays
Samsung SyncMaster S19B150
Screen Resolution
1366x768
Hard Drives
Laptop HDD TOSHIBA MK3265GSX
PSU
Generic 500W
Cooling
Stock
Keyboard
Logitech S 510 Wireless
Mouse
IBM MO28UO
Internet Speed
30 mbps
You cuold try
--disk-cache-dir Use a specific disk cache location, rather than one derived from the UserDatadir. ↪
--disk-cache-size Forces the maximum disk space to be used by the disk cache, in bytes. ↪

and put the cache on a small ram disk. If that's all you have on the ram disk you can set it to discard everything on shutdown. In fact it may speed up your performance.

I used Data Ram Ramdisk not too long ago. It wasn't difficult to set up. Here's a list:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_RAM_disk_software

You can run FireFox Portable completely out of a ram disk. Chrome may be a bit more problematic.
 

My Computer

Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
HP Media Center
OS
Windows 7 32 bit
CPU
AMD 5200+ dual core
Memory
2 GB
Graphics Card(s)
NVidia GeForce 6150SE 128 MB
Monitor(s) Displays
CRT
Screen Resolution
1280x1024
Hard Drives
500 GB Sata internal :

SIIG USB 3.0 docking stations w/WD Caviar Black 6 Gb/s drives
Keyboard
PS/2
Mouse
PS/2 Wheel Mouse
Other Info
SIIG USB 3.0 PCIexpress card.
I thought Chrome or any browser stored those data on RAM for an session so it wouldn't download again unless restarted (thats why it uses lots of ram when many tabs opened, I think).

Nope, doesn't work that way.
 

My Computer

Computer type
PC/Desktop
Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
Alienware Aurora ALX R4
OS
Windows 10 Pro (x64)
CPU
Intel Core i7-3930K (3.2GHz - 4.5GHz)
Motherboard
Alienware Aurora-R4 x79
Memory
4x Samsung 4GB PC3-12800 DDR3 (16GB 1600MHz)
Graphics Card(s)
Nvidia Geforce GTX 690
Sound Card
SteelSeries Siberia Elite
Monitor(s) Displays
Dell UltraSharp U3011
Screen Resolution
2560x1600
Hard Drives
Samsung 850 Pro 256 GB, Seagate 1TB Desktop Hybrid HDD, 2x Western Digital 4TB Green HDD
PSU
875W Some Dell PSU <.<
Case
Alienware Aurora ALX
Cooling
Custom Liquid Cooling (EK CPU & GPU blocks) dual EK 480RAD
Keyboard
Logitech G710+ Mechanical
Mouse
Logitech G700s
Internet Speed
Verizon Fios (50 mbps average)
Other Info
Server: Intel NUC D54250WYK: i5-4250U, 16GB, 256 GB mSATA, Windows Server 2012 R2
You cuold try
--disk-cache-dir Use a specific disk cache location, rather than one derived from the UserDatadir. ↪
--disk-cache-size Forces the maximum disk space to be used by the disk cache, in bytes. ↪

and put the cache on a small ram disk. If that's all you have on the ram disk you can set it to discard everything on shutdown. In fact it may speed up your performance.

I used Data Ram Ramdisk not too long ago. It wasn't difficult to set up. Here's a list:
List of RAM disk software - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

You can run FireFox Portable completely out of a ram disk. Chrome may be a bit more problematic.

Many thanks, seems that using the --disk-cache-size alongside the --disk-cache-dir worked fine here on Chrome Canary. I will try some RAM disk software of the link, and see if better or no that cache disabled. :)


I thought Chrome or any browser stored those data on RAM for an session so it wouldn't download again unless restarted (thats why it uses lots of ram when many tabs opened, I think).

Nope, doesn't work that way.

With Chrome, yes, I've tested it.
 

My Computer

Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
Custom
OS
Windows 7 Ultimate 64-bit SP1
CPU
Intel Celeron G530
Motherboard
Gigabyte GA-H61M-S2-B3
Memory
2 GB DDR3 Kingston 1333 (1066)
Graphics Card(s)
POV Nvidia Geforce GT530
Sound Card
Onboard
Monitor(s) Displays
Samsung SyncMaster S19B150
Screen Resolution
1366x768
Hard Drives
Laptop HDD TOSHIBA MK3265GSX
PSU
Generic 500W
Cooling
Stock
Keyboard
Logitech S 510 Wireless
Mouse
IBM MO28UO
Internet Speed
30 mbps
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