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Operating Systems Solaris Coredumps and swap - was part of Solaris Mem Consumption Post 302223563 by rajwinder on Thursday 7th of August 2008 08:37:46 AM
Old 08-07-2008
Coredumps and swap - was part of Solaris Mem Consumption

We have Sun OS running on spark :

SunOS ciniwnpr67 5.10 Generic_118833-24 sun4u sparc SUNW,Sun-Fire-V440

Having Physical RAM :

Sol10box # prtconf | grep Mem
Memory size: 8192 Megabytes

My Top Output is :

130 processes: 129 sleeping, 1 on cpu
CPU states: 98.8% idle, 0.2% user, 1.0% kernel, 0.0% iowait, 0.0% swap
Memory: 8192M real, 343M free, 2282M swap in use, 2195M swap free

Which shows about 7 gigs of RAM already consumed.

My sar -k shows :

SunOS ciniwnpr67 5.10 Generic_118833-24 sun4u 08/07/2008

07:29:53 sml_mem alloc fail lg_mem alloc fail ovsz_alloc fail
07:29:54 4184032128 4044621477 0 901931008 621211704 1 1723777024 0

And if i under stood it right then i have around 4044621477 + 621211704 + 1723777024 Bytes of memory or 4.5 gigs used by kernel itself ??

If it is true then it i think some thing is wrong with my solaris installtion Any suggestions pls ?
 

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swapmem_on(5)							     OBSOLETE							     swapmem_on(5)

NAME
swapmem_on - OBSOLETE kernel tunable parameter DESCRIPTION
The tunable is obsolete. Processes will always be allowed to use pseudo-swap space if it is available. In previous versions of HP-UX, system configuration required sufficient physical swap space for the maximum possible number of processes on the system. This is because HP-UX reserves swap space for a process when it is created, to ensure that a running process never needs to be killed due to insufficient swap. This was difficult, however, for systems needing gigabytes of swap space with gigabytes of physical memory, and those with workloads where the entire load would always be in core. This tunable was created to allow system swap space to be less than core memory. To accomplish this, a portion of physical memory is set aside as "pseudo-swap" space. While actual swap space is still available, processes still reserve all the swap they will need at fork or execute time from the physical device or file system swap. Once this swap is completely used, new processes do not reserve swap, and each page which would have been swapped to the physical device or file system is instead locked in memory and counted as part of the pseudo-swap space. WARNINGS
Installation of optional kernel software, from HP or other vendors, may cause changes to tunable parameter values. After installation, some tunable parameters may no longer be at the default or recommended values. For information about the effects of installation on tun- able values, consult the documentation for the kernel software being installed. For information about optional kernel software that was factory installed on your system, see at AUTHOR
was developed by HP. Tunable Kernel Parameters swapmem_on(5)
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