Swapping is costly for disk I/O and not every Linux server needs to have a swap partition and to start swapping. For instance, MySQL servers have more than enough RAM available to do their work. Yet, when a swap partition is enabled Linux starts swapping, and that degrades MySQL database performance.
Bash script to turn off Linux swap partition
An unwanted Linux swap partition can be the result of an automated and unattended Linux installation. Of course you can fiddle with the Linux kernel swapiness
settings, located in /proc/sys/vm/swapiness
and configurable in /etc/sysctl.conf
, but one can turn off the swap completely too.
Here's a tiny bash script to disable Linux' swap - for which we use the swapoff
command - and to comment out the swap partition in /etc/fstab
#!/bin/bash
# swapoff -a to disable swapping
swapoff -a
# sed to comment the swap partition in /etc/fstab
sed -i.bak -r 's/(.+ swap .+)/#\1/' /etc/fstab
Save this as turn_swap_off.sh
and execute as root:
sh /root/turn_swap_off.sh
A backup of the /etc/fstab
file is made just to be sure and to stay on the safe side.
Disable swappiness kernel parameter
Swappiness is a property for the Linux kernel that changes the balance between swapping out runtime memory, as opposed to dropping pages from the system page cache. Swappiness can be set to values between 0 and 100, inclusive. A low value means the kernel will try to avoid swapping as much as possible where a higher value instead will make the kernel aggressively try to use swap space.
You manage swappiness with sysctl
, either to get its current value or to set a new swappiness value. You can also use cat
to verify the current setting. For example:
# get current swappiness value using cat$ cat /proc/sys/vm/swappiness60
# get current swappiness value using sysctl$ sudo sysctl vm.swappiness[sudo] password for user:vm.swappiness = 60
# set a new swappiness value to 10$ sudo sysctl vm.swappiness=10
By default, the vm.swappiness
value on most Linux computers is set to 60. The higher the number, the more aggressively the VM swaps data to disk. You can change this level to a different setting either temporarily or indefinitely.
You can also edit the /etc/sysctl.conf
configuration file. Open the file /etc/sysctl.conf
with your text editor and change the value of the following entry vm.swappiness
to your suitable value (add the entry if it does not exist).
$ sudo vi /etc/sysctl.conf$ grep swappiness /etc/sysctl.confvm.swappiness=10