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собака --> это Русский --> a dog
"c" -- say "s" - as in "see" or "scent" or "sob".
for your reference:
It depends on your boot parameters but generally the new puppys will use about 600MB for bootup (ie. Running the OS itself). As soon as you start to use applications though, additional RAM will be used. Use a swap file like with Windows if you think you will run short of RAM. Best to run the Puppy and your preferred applications to see the results of your own usage. Difficult to speculate.KOOLLAYDTAC wrote: Sun Sep 13, 2020 2:46 pm Thanks mate, but how much RAM does the OS take to use though? I basically want to know how much extra RAM I'd have on top of what is used for the OS itself that will be freed up using this OS for certain things. Because I am getting different answers in my searches.![]()
Hi @KOOLLAYDTAC!KOOLLAYDTAC wrote: Sun Sep 13, 2020 2:46 pm Thanks mate, but how much RAM does the OS take to use though? I basically want to know how much extra RAM I'd have on top of what is used for the OS itself that will be freed up using this OS for certain things. Because I am getting different answers in my searches.![]()
''Most people make the mistake of thinking design is what it looks like [...] It's not [...]. Design is how it works.'' -- Steve Jobs
I have a initrd that's around 5MB, CLI/TUI (text user interface) i.e. tmux with mc for editor and file manager (I also use mc's user-menu function as a form of 'graphical' (TUI) program launcher), full ssh/sshfs, lynx web browser, calcurse ...etc. Boots near instantly and once booted I ssh into (and sshfs mount) hashbang from where I can access IRC ...etc. Initial wifi connection (automated at bootup) causes the most lag (few seconds before wifi internet access is available).01101001b wrote: Sun Sep 13, 2020 9:21 pmIF you ONLY use CLI: 40MBKOOLLAYDTAC wrote: Sun Sep 13, 2020 2:46 pm Thanks mate, but how much RAM does the OS take to use though? I basically want to know how much extra RAM I'd have on top of what is used for the OS itself that will be freed up using this OS for certain things. Because I am getting different answers in my searches.![]()
The things you do not tell us, are usually the clue to fixing the problem.
When I was a kid, I wanted to be older.
This is not what I expected
DPup-stretch just reports the allocation of memory differently as I see it. Although it reports very little RAM used, you'll find that lots of memory are actually reported as cached and also shared. I reckon same can be said of Buster. The important figure is actually how much memory is reported as FREE.mikeslr wrote: Sun Sep 13, 2020 11:55 pm IIRC, jamesbond was able to boot dpup-stretch to desktop using only 68 Mbs RAM, employing a 256 Mb Swap and the boot argument "no-copy". On a Asus 701SD with only 418 Mbs RAM and a 377 Mb Swap, I was able to boot a slightly stripped BusterPup 32-bit to desktop using only 88 Mbs of RAM without having to use the "no-copy" argument. viewtopic.php?p=4070#p4070. But if you read that post what you should notice is that on a computer with more resources and a larger monitor, more RAM was used by the same Puppy; and as soon as you start opening applications, the actual amount of RAM you need is determined by the needs of those applications and how you use the applications.
My experience is that the RAM demands of a 64-bit operating system are only slightly more than those of 32-bit operating system; maybe 10 Mbs on bootup; then slightly more for each 64-bit application over its 32-bit equivalent. Of course, if you are running a 64-bit system in order to run applications under 32-bit Wine, (or a dos-emulator, or similar) you'll need to run the 32-bit compatibility application (almost an entire operating system, itself). You might think that such arrangement might result in almost three times the RAM demands, but my impression --untested-- is that the only apparent delay has to do with how quickly getting everything necessary into RAM takes.
As an example, there's no noticeable difference in the amount of time it takes 64-bit avidemux to render an edited video and 32-bit avidemux running under Wine on the same 64-bit Puppy.
It's all sitting as cached. What is reported as FREE compared to the total RAM?ozsouth wrote: Mon Sep 14, 2020 2:01 am I just did a quick check using stock bionicpup64-8.0.
1. Boot up to graphical interface & run free in terminal, which uses about 22mb - 137mb used.
2. Boot up to graphical interface & then ctrl-alt-bkspc to exit X, run free - 87mb used.
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Using my own build of Bionic64
The far-left is as fascist as the far-right is!