vmstat -v shows that about 20% of memory pages are pinned (that would roughly correspond to those 13 GB for kernel). Does it mean that application doesn't use memory pinning (server is running Oracle+SAP)? svmon tells me that oracle and workprocesses use about 33 MB of pinned memory, perhaps it's the way they are designed. I'll have to check on some testing system what happens, if you continually increase memory for aplication, how it will affect OS behaviour.
Hello,
I'm using a unix server (HP rp2450) which has : 2 Go RAM memory and 4 Go swap.
Here is the result of vmstat -n command :
$ vmstat -n
VM
memory page faults
avm free re at pi po fr de sr in sy ... (5 Replies)
This is post number 3 in a series of unanswered "TUNING" questions. :D
With AIX 5.3 TL4, the page size can vary from the original "4k". They can now be "64k" and a couple other sizes. They also do not have to all be the same. Some can remain "4k" while others are "64k" which is what seems to... (2 Replies)
Hi
I am trying to investigate a disk performance issue, and we are not seem to be hitting the right direction in our analysis.
This is a FC disk running on USP1000 HDS system. The application is an IO intensive application, but our opinion is that it is not performing due to perceived disk... (1 Reply)
Dear friends. can anybody suggest me what to be considered in order to achieve maximum performance of AIX on which DB2 will be installed
Thanks is advance :) (1 Reply)
Dears i want to have a clear view about this tuning parameters and what they related to FS or Oracle , and how to figure the percentage of them .
maxperm%
maxclient%
v_pinshm = 1
lgpg_regions = 0
lpgp_size = 0 (3 Replies)
For some reason, my AIX 5.2 box has become slow in accepting telnet requests from others boxes. Windows, times out the connection, whereas, Unix it will wait for the AIX to display the login. I connect and it respawns back and says connected, but then sits and wait for what seems forever to get the... (5 Replies)
Hi,
we've a gigabit Ethernet adapter. And we wanted to improve the performance by tuning network parameters. so' as per IBM info center,
http://publib.boulder.ibm.com/infocenter/aix/v7r1/index.jsp?topic=%2Fcom.ibm.aix.prftungd%2Fdoc%2Fprftungd%2Fnetw_opt.htm
we tried changing the tuning... (2 Replies)
I have a IBM Power9 server coupled with a NVMe StorWize V7000 GEN3 storage, doing some benchmarks and noticing that single thread I/O (80% Read / 20% Write, common OLTP I/O profile) seems slow.
./xdisk -R0 -r80 -b 8k -M 1 -f /usr1/testing -t60 -OD -V
BS Proc AIO read% IO Flag IO/s ... (8 Replies)
Discussion started by: c3rb3rus
8 Replies
LEARN ABOUT HPUX
nflocks
nflocks(5) File Formats Manual nflocks(5)NAME
nflocks - maximum number of file locks
VALUES
Failsafe
Default
The default value is computed at runtime and depends on the amount of physical memory on the system. For small memory systems (less than
1GB), the default is 1200. For systems with more than 1GB of memory, the default is 4096, or 4K.
Allowed values
The minimum value is 50. The maximum value is 0x1000000.
Specify a positive integer value.
DESCRIPTION
The tunable represents the maximum number of file locks that are available system-wide.
Who Is Expected to Change This Tunable?
This tunable should be changed on systems expected to run applications with large number of file locks. When changing this number note
that one file may have several locks, and databases that use or may need an exceptionally large number of locks.
Restrictions on Changing
This tunable is dynamic (tuning will take effect immediately on the running system). When the value of is dynamically tuned it cannot be
set to a value lower than the current number of file locks in the running kernel.
When Should the Value of This Tunable Be Raised?
The value should be increased when large numbers of file locks are expected to be used simultaneously.
What are the Side Effects of Raising the Value?
The kernel allocates a portion of memory proportional to the new value of and frees memory proportional to the old value. Additional mem-
ory is consumed as new locks are created.
When Should the Value of This Tunable Be Lowered?
The value can be lowered to limit the number of available file locks on a system and reduce memory consumption.
What are the Side Effects of Lowering the Value?
The kernel allocates a portion of memory proportional to the new value of and frees memory proportional to the old value. Additional mem-
ory may be released to the system to be used for other purposes if the usage was ever higher than this new value.
What Other Tunable Values Should Be Changed at the Same Time?
None.
WARNINGS
Setting to the maximum value(0x1000000) will result in a large memory allocation (~.5GB). A request to change the value of will fail with
set if there is either not enough free memory or the remaining free memory would be so small as to potentially hinder system performance.
All HP-UX kernel tunable parameters are release specific. This parameter may be removed or have its meaning changed in future releases of
HP-UX.
Installation of optional kernel software, from HP or other vendors, may cause changes to tunable parameter values. After installation,
some tunable parameters may no longer be at the default or recommended values. For information about the effects of installation on tun-
able values, consult the documentation for the kernel software being installed. For information about optional kernel software that was
factory installed on your system, see at
AUTHOR
was developed by HP.
SEE ALSO kctune(1M), sam(1M), gettune(2), settune(2), fcntl(2), lockf(2).
Tunable Kernel Parameters nflocks(5)