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Full Discussion: RAM always used 100 %
Operating Systems Linux Red Hat RAM always used 100 % Post 302692395 by mark54g on Monday 27th of August 2012 02:36:33 PM
Old 08-27-2012
Oracle databases do tremendous amounts of reads. Linux, in general, caches reads into memory. Unused memory is wasted. The disconnect here is one that people believe a system is supposed to behave a certain way and that may not always be the best case.

Forget how much memory is being used and ask whether performance is impacted. File system caching is dropped when an application uses the memory, but also, realize that keeping things in memory translates into faster lookups.
 

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SYNC(8) 						     Linux Programmer's Manual							   SYNC(8)

NAME
sync - synchronize data on disk with memory SYNOPSIS
sync [--help] [--version] DESCRIPTION
sync writes any data buffered in memory out to disk. This can include (but is not limited to) modified superblocks, modified inodes, and delayed reads and writes. This must be implemented by the kernel; The sync program does nothing but exercise the sync(2) system call. The kernel keeps data in memory to avoid doing (relatively slow) disk reads and writes. This improves performance, but if the computer crashes, data may be lost or the file system corrupted as a result. sync ensures that everything in memory is written to disk. sync should be called before the processor is halted in an unusual manner (e.g., before causing a kernel panic when debugging new kernel code). In general, the processor should be halted using the shutdown(8) or reboot(8) or halt(8) commands, which will attempt to put the system in a quiescent state before calling sync(2). (Various implementations of these commands exist; consult your documentation; on some systems one should not call reboot(8) and halt(8) directly.) OPTIONS
--help Print a usage message on standard output and exit successfully. --version Print version information on standard output, then exit successfully. -- Terminate option list. ENVIRONMENT
The variables LANG, LC_ALL, LC_CTYPE, and LC_MESSAGES have the usual meaning. CONFORMING TO
POSIX.2. NOTES
On Linux, sync is only guaranteed to schedule the dirty blocks for writing; it can actually take a short time before all the blocks are finally written. The reboot(8) and halt(8) commands take this into account by sleeping for a few seconds after calling sync(2). This page describes sync as found in the fileutils-4.0 package; other versions may differ slightly. SEE ALSO
sync(2), halt(8), reboot(8), update(8) COLOPHON
This page is part of release 3.44 of the Linux man-pages project. A description of the project, and information about reporting bugs, can be found at http://www.kernel.org/doc/man-pages/. GNU
1998-11-01 SYNC(8)
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