Nope its from the memory counter
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Ive run a performance monitor on a PC and get the following result on memory
Available MBytes 282.121
Commit Limit 4113494016
Commited Bytes 1121615961 which is equal to 1096Mb
Physical memory installed in this PC is 1Gb
So the commited bytes is pretty much the same as the physical memory i.e. all the memory is used, so why does the Available MBytes say there is 282 free
Cheers
G
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Ok I think I answered my own question
http://support.microsoft.c
Memory, Available MBytes - this measures how much RAM is available to satisfy demands for virtual memory (either new allocations, or for restoring a page from the pagefile).
When RAM is in short supply (e.g. Committed Bytes is greater than installed RAM), the operating system will attempt to keep a certain fraction of installed RAM available for immediate use by copying virtual memory pages that are not in active use to the pagefile. For this reason, this counter will not go to zero and is not necessarily a good indication of whether your system is short of RAM.
Basically Available MBytes is calculated by adding the amount of space on the zeroed, free and standby memory lists. All of this memory is not nessasarily available.
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by: ebjersPosted on 2008-04-08 at 12:13:27ID: 21308576
What counter are you getting this from? Could it be the page file and not the physical memory?
eb