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Full Discussion: AIX 5.2 performance question
Operating Systems AIX AIX 5.2 performance question Post 302256565 by bakunin on Monday 10th of November 2008 06:04:48 AM
Old 11-10-2008
Quote:
Originally Posted by jhall
Code:
# svmon -G
               size      inuse       free        pin    virtual
memory      1048576    1048457        119     114806     215174

The values marked bold are the interesting numbers in the output: the "virtual" number is what you actually use, the "inuse" number is what you have. As long as the right number is smaller than the left as a rule of thumb everything is fine. Once the right number is (much) bigger than the left one you have to get more memory. The necessary amount is (again - rule of thumb, this is no exact algorithm) the difference then. Not that all these numbers are 4k-pages, you will have to multiply by 4096 to get bytes.

In your case the machine has 4GB of RAM and uses roughly 1GB.

Quote:
Originally Posted by jhall
Code:
# vmo -a | egrep -i 'perm|cli|free|lru'
           minperm% = 20
           maxperm% = 80
         maxclient% = 80
          lrubucket = 131072

If i remember correctly these are all defaults, but to me it does not look like you have a memory problem.

Could you please tell us what the machine is doing? What are the processes running on it, are there some standard applications on it?

bakunin
 

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mem(7D) 							      Devices								   mem(7D)

NAME
mem, kmem, allkmem - physical or virtual memory access SYNOPSIS
/dev/mem /dev/kmem /dev/allkmem DESCRIPTION
The file /dev/mem is a special file that provides access to the physical memory of the computer. The file /dev/kmem is a special file that provides access to the virtual address space of the operating system kernel, excluding memory that is associated with an I/O device. The file /dev/allkmem is a special file that provides access to the virtual address space of the operating system kernel, including memory that is associated with an I/O device. You can use any of these devices to examine and modify the system. Byte addresses in /dev/mem are interpreted as physical memory addresses. Byte addresses in /dev/kmem and /dev/allkmem are interpreted as kernel virtual memory addresses. A reference to a non-existent location returns an error. See ERRORS for more information. The file /dev/mem accesses physical memory; the size of the file is equal to the amount of physical memory in the computer. This size may be larger than 4GB on a system running the 32-bit operating environment. In this case, you can access memory beyond 4GB using a series of read(2) and write(2) calls, a pread64() or pwrite64() call, or a combination of llseek(2) and read(2) or write(2). ERRORS
EFAULT Occurs when trying to write(2) a read-only location (allkmem), read(2) a write-only location (allkmem), or read(2) or write(2) a non-existent or unimplemented location (mem, kmem, allkmem). EIO Occurs when trying to read(2) or write(2) a memory location that is associated with an I/O device using the /dev/kmem spe- cial file. ENXIO Results from attempting to mmap(2) a non-existent physical (mem) or virtual (kmem, allkmem) memory address. FILES
/dev/mem Provides access to the computer's physical memory. /dev/kmem Provides access to the virtual address space of the operating system kernel, excluding memory that is associated with an I/O device. /dev/allkmem Provides access to the virtual address space of the operating system kernel, including memory that is associated with an I/O device. SEE ALSO
llseek(2), mmap(2), read(2), write(2) WARNINGS
Using these devices to modify (that is, write to) the address space of a live running operating system or to modify the state of a hardware device is extremely dangerous and may result in a system panic if kernel data structures are damaged or if device state is changed. SunOS 5.10 18 Feb 2002 mem(7D)
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