The swap space is a unique space on the disk that is used by the system when Physical RAM is full. When a Linux machine runout the RAM. It use swap space to move inactive pages from RAM.
To add swap space on CentOS 8 Operating System you can use folowing two ways, one we can create a dedicated partition for swap or another one is created a swap file and use it as swap space.
Usually, when we are creating VPS with any provider like Digital Ocean, Linode, etc., we don’t have the swap partition into the server, in this case, we need to create swap file to use as swap space in server.
In this tutorial, we have explained all necessary steps to add swap space on CentOS 8 machine.
Prerequisites
Before beginning with this tutorial, make sure you have CentOS 8 machine and a user to login into the system with sudo privileges.
Before creating a swap file, it is good to know swap file or swap partition is available into your system or not.
To check the swap space, you can use below command:
$ sudo swapon --show
If the output of the above command is empty, it means your system doesn’t have swap space.
If your system has already configured swap space you will get output like below:
It is also possible to configure more than one swap space.
Swap File Creation
In this tutorial, we will add 1GB of swap space, if you want to create bigger swap space you can create by replacing 1G with any other size what you want.
To create a swap file, follow the below steps:
Step 1 – Create a file for swap
To create a file for swap space, use the fallocate command. Here we are creating 1GB swap file at /swapfile file. As shown below:
$ sudo fallocate -l 4G /swapfile
If in your system fallocate is not installed or you get a message like fallocate failed: Operation not supported, you can use below command to create swap file:
$ sudo dd if=/dev/zero of=/swapfile bs=1024 count=1048576
Step 2 – Change Permission
The swap file should only access by the root user; you can execute the below command to configure correct permission for /swapfile.
$ sudo chmod 600 /swapfile
Step 3 – Create swap space
To create swap space, use the mkswap command, as shown below:
$ sudo mkswap /swapfile
Step 4 – Activate swap space
To activate swap file use the swapon command, as shown below:
$ sudo swapon /swapfile
To activate swap space permanent by configuring file /etc/fstab:
$ sudo vim /etc/fstab
Add following line into the file /etc/fstab:
/swapfile swap swap defaults 0 0
Step 5 – Verify Swap space
To check the swap space is active or not, you can use swapon or free command, as shown below:
$ sudo swapon --show
$ sudo free –h
Configure Swappiness Value
Swappiness is the essential swap properties of Linux kernel, which is defined when the system will use swap space. Swappiness can have the value between 0 to 100, which is represent the percentage of RAM utilization, for example, if you set the value 20 for swappiness, it means the Linux kernel will use swap space when RAM is only 20 % available.
So, we can say the lower value of swappiness is to try to avoid the use of swap space.
The default value of swappiness is 30, which you can check by using the following command:
$ cat /proc/sys/vm/swappiness
The default value (30) of swappiness is ok for the desktop system, but when you run the production system, try to set the lower value for production servers.
You can set the swappiness value by using sysctl command, for example, if you want to set the value of swappiness is 20 you should execute below command:
$ sudo sysctl vm.swappiness=20
To change the value of swappiness permanently, you should change the parameter “vm.swappiness” into the /etc/sysctl.conf file and reboot the system.
vm.swappiness=10
Remove Swap File
To deactivate and remove the active swap space, follow the below steps:
Step 1 – Deactivate Swap Space
To deactivate swap space, you can use the swapoff command, as shown below:
$ sudo swapoff –v /swapfile
Step 2 – Remove from /etc/fstab
Edit the /etc/fstab file and remove the line /swapfile swap swap defaults 0 0 from the file and save
Step 3 – Delete swapfile file
You can delete the /swapfile file by using the rm command, as shown below:
$ sudo rm /swapfile
Conclusion
Now you have learned how to add a swap space on CentOS 8 machine if it not configured or you want to create another swap space.
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