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Full Discussion: Low Virtual memory available
Operating Systems AIX Low Virtual memory available Post 302600521 by fredrivard on Tuesday 21st of February 2012 09:49:55 AM
Old 02-21-2012
Low Virtual memory available

Hi

I am running AIX 5.2. My server is running low on memory. It it using about 1307775 file pages on a total of 1511424 (from vmstat -v).

I looked at the memory yesterday morning, and we had plenty of free memory. I did a backup from Windows (ftp mget command) of a large file selection. From this moment, free memory dropped to very low.

Question #1 : how do I prevent that to happen?
Question #2 : how do I "flush" memory for it to be normal, without restarting my server?

Here is the result of vmstat -v :
Code:
 vmstat -v                                                    
 1511424 memory pages                                         
 1462705 lruable pages                                        
     184 free pages                                           
       1 memory pools                                         
   60528 pinned pages                                         
    80.1 maxpin percentage                                    
    20.0 minperm percentage                                   
    80.0 maxperm percentage                                   
    89.4 numperm percentage                                   
 1307775 file pages                                           
     0.0 compressed percentage                                
       0 compressed pages                                     
     0.0 numclient percentage                                 
    80.0 maxclient percentage                                 
       0 client pages                                         
       0 remote pageouts scheduled                            
      32 pending disk I/Os blocked with no pbuf               
       0 paging space I/Os blocked with no psbuf              
  198714 filesystem I/Os blocked with no fsbuf                
       0 client filesystem I/Os blocked with no fsbuf         
       0 external pager filesystem I/Os blocked with no fsbuf

Thanks

Last edited by jim mcnamara; 02-21-2012 at 11:07 AM..
 

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VMSTAT(8)						   Linux Administrator's Manual 						 VMSTAT(8)

NAME
vmstat - Report virtual memory statistics SYNOPSIS
vmstat [-a] [-n] [delay [ count]] vmstat [-f] [-s] [-m] vmstat [-S unit] vmstat [-d] vmstat [-D] vmstat [-p disk partition] vmstat [-V] DESCRIPTION
vmstat reports information about processes, memory, paging, block IO, traps, disks and cpu activity. The first report produced gives averages since the last reboot. Additional reports give information on a sampling period of length delay. The process and memory reports are instantaneous in either case. Options The -a switch displays active/inactive memory, given a 2.5.41 kernel or better. The -f switch displays the number of forks since boot. This includes the fork, vfork, and clone system calls, and is equivalent to the total number of tasks created. Each process is represented by one or more tasks, depending on thread usage. This display does not repeat. The -m displays slabinfo. The -n switch causes the header to be displayed only once rather than periodically. The -s switch displays a table of various event counters and memory statistics. This display does not repeat. delay is the delay between updates in seconds. If no delay is specified, only one report is printed with the average values since boot. count is the number of updates. If no count is specified and delay is defined, count defaults to infinity. The -d reports disk statistics (2.5.70 or above required) The -D reports some summary statistics about disk activity. The -p followed by some partition name for detailed statistics (2.5.70 or above required) The -S followed by k or K or m or M switches changes the units of ouput from bytes to outputs between 1000, 1024, 1000000, or 1048576 bytes. Note this does not change the swap (si/so) or block (bi/bo) fields. The -V switch results in displaying version information. FIELD DESCRIPTION FOR VM MODE
Procs r: The number of processes waiting for run time. b: The number of processes in uninterruptible sleep. Memory swpd: the amount of virtual memory used. free: the amount of idle memory. buff: the amount of memory used as buffers. cache: the amount of memory used as cache. inact: the amount of inactive memory. (-a option) active: the amount of active memory. (-a option) Swap si: Amount of memory swapped in from disk (/s). so: Amount of memory swapped to disk (/s). IO bi: Blocks received from a block device (blocks/s). bo: Blocks sent to a block device (blocks/s). System in: The number of interrupts per second, including the clock. cs: The number of context switches per second. CPU These are percentages of total CPU time. us: Time spent running non-kernel code. (user time, including nice time) sy: Time spent running kernel code. (system time) id: Time spent idle. Prior to Linux 2.5.41, this includes IO-wait time. wa: Time spent waiting for IO. Prior to Linux 2.5.41, included in idle. st: Time stolen from a virtual machine. Prior to Linux 2.6.11, unknown. FIELD DESCRIPTION FOR DISK MODE
Reads total: Total reads completed successfully merged: grouped reads (resulting in one I/O) sectors: Sectors read successfully ms: milliseconds spent reading Writes total: Total writes completed successfully merged: grouped writes (resulting in one I/O) sectors: Sectors written successfully ms: milliseconds spent writing IO cur: I/O in progress s: seconds spent for I/O FIELD DESCRIPTION FOR DISK PARTITION MODE
reads: Total number of reads issued to this partition read sectors: Total read sectors for partition writes : Total number of writes issued to this partition requested writes: Total number of write requests made for partition FIELD DESCRIPTION FOR SLAB MODE
cache: Cache name num: Number of currently active objects total: Total number of available objects size: Size of each object pages: Number of pages with at least one active object NOTES
vmstat does not require special permissions. These reports are intended to help identify system bottlenecks. Linux vmstat does not count itself as a running process. All linux blocks are currently 1024 bytes. Old kernels may report blocks as 512 bytes, 2048 bytes, or 4096 bytes. Since procps 3.1.9, vmstat lets you choose units (k, K, m, M) default is K (1024 bytes) in the default mode vmstat uses slabinfo 1.1 FIXME FILES
/proc/meminfo /proc/stat /proc/*/stat SEE ALSO
iostat(1), sar(1), mpstat(1), ps(1), top(1), free(1) BUGS
Does not tabulate the block io per device or count the number of system calls. AUTHORS
Written by Henry Ware <al172@yfn.ysu.edu>. Fabian Frederick <ffrederick@users.sourceforge.net> (diskstat, slab, partitions...) Throatwobbler Ginkgo Labs 2009 Jan 9 VMSTAT(8)
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