Quote:
Originally Posted by pkearney
Hi Flesso,
Thanks for the response. I'm fairly new to Linux, so I'm guessing I need to run these commands from a secure shell using root? (I've used WinSCP3 in the past but just tried to access using it again and I can't authenticate, so I've sent a message to VPS Hosting support).
In a recent note from a VPS Hosting SysAdmin they told me I was using 110Mb of 384Mb. Although I don't understand how the memory allocation works, I'd have thought you should be using pretty much all your memory at any one time, and paging out less active stuff to your page file. Another thing the SysAdmin told me was that I'd had 9136825 fail counts for memory.
I'll run those commands and get the info out here for all to see
Regards
Paul
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I would use Putty to run them via SSH.
Once you have run them, paste the results here.
VPS Hosting memory allocations works just like it would on your desktop. You get allocated a gaurunteed amount of memory, in your case 384mb. The burst amount if the amount is the amount which your
VPS Hosting can bust up to (if some big request happens for a few seconds), this may not always be available as others on the node will be used the burst space as well.
In Short:
Guaranteed: For Your Use Only
Burst: Shared With Others