Quote:
Originally Posted by FormerPalmOS
Setting pagepool = 0 means "Windows CE, feel free to use as much memory as you want for paging in copies of IMGFS files instead of being limited to XX MB" where XX is whatever we set - like 6 or 9 or 12. You Sprint guys can get away with this - and it will be fast. We VZW folks can't - we have to ration out our memory...
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To keep it short, we were correct and THIS is a Dynamic PagePool. Any time you set a pagepool size it is by default static. I.E. all that xx 15 and xx16 has nothing to do with a static or dynamic pagepool, it simply tells the OS how to read the size. It'd be interesting to see what setting the least significant bits to would result in....
That is, if we set the values we associate with the pagepool to xx 14 or xx 13 what would be the result? Would 01 14 be 8MB or 16MB? (I'm betting on 16MB)