One morning, a massive application arrived, demanding space to bloom. RHEL didn't just toss it in; it used a clever system of . It divided the application into tiny 4kB seeds called "pages" and mapped them to the garden’s "frames".
Suddenly, the sun dimmed. The "Available" memory was nearly zero. A dark figure appeared at the edge of the garden: the . Its job was grim—to execute a process so the rest of the system could survive. Rhel Memory
Deep within the silicon halls of a modern server, there lived a vigilant guardian named . Its most precious treasure was a sprawling garden known as Physical Memory , where every byte was a flower that needed constant tending. The Arrival of the Heavy Workload One morning, a massive application arrived, demanding space