Not sure why that is, but I have 32 GB of RAM and I would like my system to utilize it as much as possible, but as you can see in the screenshot, the system is only using 5.66 GB of the physical RAM, but swap is still being used in a high number. Is this normal? Should I lower the swappiness to lower than 10? Should I let it be?
Thanks
Don’t listen to this advice. Messing with things you don’t understand is how you learn your OS. Mess with it, break it, then RTFM and fix it. That’s how ya learn!!
Or just RTFM first and learn without breaking stuff.
That’s not any fun
pretty much. learning things without a corresponding “oh… shit.” moment, just never quite stick with you the same way.
This is 100% it. The sleepless nights I’ve spent hunting for solutions after nuking everything, taught me a great deal. It was even so much fun, too.
Nah, without breaking stuff, you never really learn
Hands-on experience is important.
Edit: obviously don’t do this with production machines, but I thought that was given…
No fun. Nothing learned.
Pain is the best teacher.
That’s great if you treat your computer as a toy. But if you actually need it to do work then that’s terrible advice.
Destroy a virtual machine first, not your actual computer.
I have a whole machine that I don’t touch for stuff like this to get my actual work done on. This one is for learning and fucking shit up. Lol
Nah, homie, fucking shit up then spending your whole evening looking for solutions is what makes it so much fun. lol
If your googling is about to take you to the arch wiki, you’re having a good night!
Learning by doing, but make backups.
tinkers with pulseaudio
“Why does my audio not work?”
tinkers more
“Okay I think it kinda works now?”
it breaks again
“fml”
I found the docs for pulseaudio and particularly for pipewire to be rather hard to use, personally. RTFM works if the manual is readable, but in these cases, the learning curve was very steep for me (and I still don’t know that I properly understood what’s going on, but it’s working, so I’ve stopped tinkering for now).
You’re not really RTFM unless you’re digging into source code comments