How can you optimize your file caching settings on a Linux system?
File caching is a mechanism that allows Linux to store frequently accessed data in memory, reducing the need for disk I/O and improving performance. However, file caching also consumes memory resources that could be used by other processes or applications. Therefore, optimizing your file caching settings on a Linux system requires balancing the trade-off between speed and memory usage. In this article, you will learn how to monitor, adjust, and tune your file caching settings on a Linux system using various tools and parameters.
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Tharwat SOLIMAN -CIO-IT Manager-ITIL-VMware-Cyber SecurityIT Manager
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Destiny Young, DBA(Cand.), FIIM, IIM-CISP/CDMP, MCPN, MNCSCybersecurity & IT Infrastructure Engineer | Data Governance and Privacy Compliance - NIST 27001 2022, SP 800-63 |…
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Usama IdreesPrincipal DevOps, Cloud Architect | Engineering Expert in Scalable IT Solutions, CI/CD Pipelines, Kubernetes, AWS…