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Full Discussion: SWAP SIZE Recommended.
Operating Systems AIX SWAP SIZE Recommended. Post 302564465 by zxmaus on Thursday 13th of October 2011 05:46:59 PM
Old 10-13-2011
While I totally agree with literally every word Bakunin said... if you start paging you do not need bigger paging spaces you need more memory Smilie A healthy AIX box with sufficient physical does not page (at least not after AIX 5.3 when lru_file_repage has been switched off as it should be).

I would like to add a few things.

If you start swapping, one of your major problems will not be the size of your paging space but how fast you can access it. So more smaller swapspaces of same size on different 'idle' disks make much more sense than one big slow swap area.

Apart from this, AIX cannot manage swapspaces bigger 34 GB. So if you want to go really with big paging areas, than create at least 2 of them - same size but smaller 34 GB.

Regarding SAP - actually their recommendation (and similar as well for oracle and sybase) on current AIX boxes with sufficient memory is
up to 4 GB memory - 2x size of memory + 256 MB
4 - 16 GB memory - size of memory
17+ GB - 1/2 size of memory + 4 GB

Regards
zxmaus
 

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TAU_TRACK_MEMORY_HEA(3) 				      TAU Instrumentation API					   TAU_TRACK_MEMORY_HEA(3)

NAME
TAU_TRACK_MEMORY_HEADROOM - Track the headroom (amount of memory for a process to grow) by periodically interrupting the program SYNOPSIS
C/C++: TAU_TRACK_MEMORY_HEADROOM(void); Fortran: TAU_TRACK_MEMORY_HEADROOM(void); DESCRIPTION
Tracks the amount of memory available for the process before it runs out of free memory on the heap. This call sets up a signal handler that is invoked every 10 seconds by an interrupt (this interval may be altered by using the TAU_SET_INTERRUPT_INTERVAL call). Inside the interrupt handler, TAU evaluates how much memory it can allocate and associates it with the callstack using the TAU context events (See TAU_REGISTER_CONTEXT_EVENT(3)). The user can vary the size of the callstack by setting the environment variable TAU_CALLPATH_DEPTH (default is 2). This call is useful on machines like IBM BG/L where no virtual memory (or paging using the swap space) is present. The amount of heap memory available to the program is limited by the amount of available physical memory. TAU executes a series of malloc calls with a granularity of 1MB and determines the amount of memory available for the program to grow. EXAMPLE
C/C++ : TAU_TRACK_MEMORY_HEADROOM(); Fortran : call TAU_TRACK_MEMORY_HEADROOM() SEE ALSO
TAU_TRACK_MEMORY(3), TAU_SET_INTERRUPT_INTERVAL(3), TAU_ENABLE_TRACKING_MEMORY_HEADROOM(3), TAU_DISABLE_TRACKING_MEMORY_HEADROOM(3), TAU_TRACK_MEMORY_HEADROOM_HERE(3) 08/31/2005 TAU_TRACK_MEMORY_HEA(3)
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