12.12. Adding Swap Space

Sometimes a system requires more swap space. This section describes two methods to increase swap space: adding swap to an existing partition or new hard drive, and creating a swap file on an existing partition.

For information on how to encrypt swap space, which options exist, and why it should be done, refer to Section 18.13, “Encrypting Swap”.

12.12.1. Swap on a New Hard Drive or Existing Partition

Adding a new hard drive for swap gives better performance than using a partition on an existing drive. Setting up partitions and hard drives is explained in Section 18.2, “Adding Disks” while Section 2.6.1, “Designing the Partition Layout” discusses partition layouts and swap partition size considerations.

Use swapon to add a swap partition to the system. For example:

# swapon /dev/ada1s1b

Warning:

It is possible to use any partition not currently mounted, even if it already contains data. Using swapon on a partition that contains data will overwrite and destroy that data. Make sure that the partition to be added as swap is really the intended partition before running swapon.

To automatically add this swap partition on boot, add an entry to /etc/fstab:

/dev/ada1s1b	none	swap	sw	0	0

See fstab(5) for an explanation of the entries in /etc/fstab. More information about swapon can be found in swapon(8).

12.12.2. Creating a Swap File

These examples create a 512M swap file called /usr/swap0 instead of using a partition.

Using swap files requires that the module needed by md(4) has either been built into the kernel or has been loaded before swap is enabled. See Chapter 8, Configuring the FreeBSD Kernel for information about building a custom kernel.

Example 12.2. Creating a Swap File
  1. Create the swap file:

    # dd if=/dev/zero of=/usr/swap0 bs=1m count=512
  2. Set the proper permissions on the new file:

    # chmod 0600 /usr/swap0
  3. Inform the system about the swap file by adding a line to /etc/fstab:

    md99	none	swap	sw,file=/usr/swap0,late	0	0

    The md(4) device md99 is used, leaving lower device numbers available for interactive use.

  4. Swap space will be added on system startup. To add swap space immediately, use swapon(8):

    # swapon -aL

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