Sponsored Content
Top Forums UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users Issue with insufficient swap or memory space Post 302356029 by kavithakuttyk on Thursday 24th of September 2009 10:11:19 AM
Old 09-24-2009
Issue with insufficient swap or memory space

Hi,
When I execute one of my shellscript I am getting the below mentioned error message .This application takes 2input files which have the records counts 26463 and 1178046
exec(2): insufficient swap or memory available.
exec(2): insufficient swap or memory available.
exec(2): insufficient swap or memory available.
exec(2): insufficient swap or memory available.
exec(2): insufficient swap or memory available.
exec(2): insufficient swap or memory available.
exec(2): insufficient swap or memory available.
exec(2): insufficient swap or memory available.
I have zipped most of the files in my directory.If anybody knows how to resolve this issue please help me.

Thanks
 

10 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting

1. HP-UX

swap space (lvol2) is not using when physical memory is 98% used

Dear all I have rp7620 sever with hp-ux 11.23 this swap space is not yet used when the physical memory usage of 98 %. through openview it's shows memory bottleneck . how to resolve the problem. Rajesh (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: rajeshtt32
1 Replies

2. UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users

insufficient available memory

Hi, when navigating on application webpages (peoplesoft applications) the users receive : INSUFFICIENT AVAILABLE MEMORY. I issued vmstat on UNIX server ( where is hosted Web server and application server and DB). Here is the result : :vmstat 2 10 System configuration: lcpu=4 mem=30720MB... (8 Replies)
Discussion started by: big123456
8 Replies

3. Shell Programming and Scripting

Issue with insufficient swap or memory space

Hi, When I execute one of my shellscript I am getting the below mentioned error message .This application takes 2input files which have the records counts 26463 and 1178046 exec(2): insufficient swap or memory available. exec(2): insufficient swap or memory available. exec(2):... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: kavithakuttyk
2 Replies

4. Solaris

swap space issue

HI All, Recently during oracle install I realized that I did not have enough swap space. So I - 1. Created a swap file "swap_fille1" in /rpool using mkfile - # ls -ltr /rpool total 10487121 drwxr-xr-x 3 root root 3 Dec 21 12:09 boot drwxr-xr-x 2 root root ... (10 Replies)
Discussion started by: sumeet
10 Replies

5. Solaris

No Space Left - Memory/Swap issue

:wall:I'm having a bit of a problem with Solaris 10u8 and one of our applications requesting memory and being told, "no space left". The break down: 24GB Physical Memory 8GB swap at the time of occurance, here's what a memory breakdown looks like: Page Summary Pages ... (21 Replies)
Discussion started by: aychbee45
21 Replies

6. HP-UX

Swap space issue.

Hi, I am not sure how many scripts / java processes running on my HP-UX server. I need to calculate the total heap of these processes. I then need to recommend increasing the swap memory to be increase and equal to total heap if that is the right concept. Currently we are facing... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: mohtashims
2 Replies

7. UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users

Swap space issue

I have Solaris-10 with mutiple zones running in it. My Big Brother monitoring is complaining for very less swap space available, but I am not able to find, what process has consumed its swap space and how to clear it. All zones including global server have almost blank /tmp with very less data.... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: solaris_1977
3 Replies

8. Linux

Swap memory issue

Hi, In our production box i can see the Swap space using the below command free total used free shared buffers cached Mem: 65963232 41041084 24922148 0 877160 35936292 -/+ buffers/cache: 4227632 61735600 Swap: 4192880 ... (6 Replies)
Discussion started by: ratheeshjulk
6 Replies

9. Shell Programming and Scripting

Xargs error: insufficient space for argument

I'm trying to crudely hack my way through some data processing. I have file.txt with around 17,000 lines like this: ACYPI002690-PA.aa.afa.afa.trim_phyml_tree_fullnames_fullhomolog.txt 3 72 71 ACYPI002690-PA.aa.afa.afa.trim_phyml_tree_fullnames_fullhomolog.txt 97 111 71... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: pathunkathunk
1 Replies

10. AIX

AIX swap space, physical memory & cache

Hi, I am new to AIX, Can someone please help me how to know the swap space, total physical memory and system cache? We are using AIX 5.3. Thanks! (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: Phaneendra G
3 Replies
tmpfs(7FS)							   File Systems 							tmpfs(7FS)

NAME
tmpfs - memory based file system SYNOPSIS
#include <sys/mount.h> mount (special, directory, MS_DATA, "tmpfs", NULL, 0); DESCRIPTION
tmpfs is a memory based file system which uses kernel resources relating to the VM system and page cache as a file system. Once mounted, a tmpfs file system provides standard file operations and semantics. tmpfs is so named because files and directories are not preserved across reboot or unmounts, all files residing on a tmpfs file system that is unmounted will be lost. tmpfs file systems can be mounted with the command: mount -F tmpfs swap directory Alternatively, to mount a tmpfs file system on /tmp at multi-user startup time (maximizing possible performance improvements), add the following line to /etc/vfstab: swap -/tmp tmpfs - yes - tmpfs is designed as a performance enhancement which is achieved by caching the writes to files residing on a tmpfs file system. Perfor- mance improvements are most noticeable when a large number of short lived files are written and accessed on a tmpfs file system. Large com- pilations with tmpfs mounted on /tmp are a good example of this. Users of tmpfs should be aware of some constraints involved in mounting a tmpfs file system. The resources used by tmpfs are the same as those used when commands are executed (for example, swap space allocation). This means that large sized tmpfs files can affect the amount of space left over for programs to execute. Likewise, programs requiring large amounts of memory use up the space available to tmpfs. Users running into this constraint (for example, running out of space on tmpfs) can allocate more swap space by using the swap(1M) command. Another constraint is that the number of files available in a tmpfs file system is calculated based on the physical memory of the machine and not the size of the swap device/partition. If you have too many files, tmpfs will print a warning message and you will be unable to create new files. You cannot increase this limit by adding swap space. Normal file system writes are scheduled to be written to a permanent storage medium along with all control information associated with the file (for example, modification time, file permissions). tmpfs control information resides only in memory and never needs to be written to permanent storage. File data remains in core until memory demands are sufficient to cause pages associated with tmpfs to be reused at which time they are copied out to swap. An additional mount option can be specified to control the size of an individual tmpfs file system. SEE ALSO
df(1M), mount(1M), mount_tmpfs(1M), swap(1M), mmap(2), mount(2), umount(2), vfstab(4) System Administration Guide: Basic Administration DIAGNOSTICS
If tmpfs runs out of space, one of the following messages will display in the console. directory: File system full, swap space limit exceeded This message appears because a page could not be allocated while writing to a file. This can occur if tmpfs is attempting to write more than it is allowed, or if currently executing programs are using a lot of memory. To make more space available, remove unnecessary files, exit from some programs, or allocate more swap space using swap(1M). directory: File system full, memory allocation failed tmpfs ran out of physical memory while attempting to create a new file or directory. Remove unnecessary files or directories or install more physical memory. WARNINGS
Files and directories on a tmpfs file system are not preserved across reboots or unmounts. Command scripts or programs which count on this will not work as expected. NOTES
Compilers do not necessarily use /tmp to write intermediate files therefore missing some significant performance benefits. This can be remedied by setting the environment variable TMPDIR to /tmp. Compilers use the value in this environment variable as the name of the direc- tory to store intermediate files. swap to a tmpfs file is not supported. df(1M) output is of limited accuracy since a tmpfs file system size is not static and the space available to tmpfs is dependent on the swap space demands of the entire system. SunOS 5.10 9 Oct 1990 tmpfs(7FS)
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 07:15 PM.
Unix & Linux Forums Content Copyright 1993-2022. All Rights Reserved.
Privacy Policy