Hi! I ran the following test on 3 different setups: #!/usr/bin/php <? $n=1024*256; $usage1=memory_get_usage(); $rusage1=memory_get_usage(true); $a=array(); for($i=0;$i<$n;$i++) $a[]=0; $usage2=memory_get_usage(); $rusage2=memory_get_usage(true); echo ($usage2-$usage1).'/'.($rusage2-$rusage1); ?> ...and I got the following results: 32bit kernel & 32bit php - 18875368/19136512 64bit kernel & 64bit php - 35654376/35913728 64bit kernel & 32bit php - 18875368/19136512 Some client has a 64bit xen-based VPS with 512MB RAM user for webhosting and I'm wondering if I can free some memory installing httpd&php i386 modules. I understand that 64bit programs use more memory because the pointers, integers, etc. are now 64bit instead of 32bit, but running a 32bit program on a 64bit architecture is the same as running that program on a 32bit architecture (just concerning the memory used)? At least, that's my conclusion after running the above test. Am I wrong? Thank you! PS: No, the client's service provider does not offer a 32bit vps platform and the client won't change the provider or pay for additional memory. -- George Negoita System Administrator iMedia Plus Group _______________________________________________ CentOS mailing list CentOS@xxxxxxxxxx http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos