Hello,
This is RHEL 5.7. swap is almost full, but I am not sure, what to release and how to release space. This is production server so I would like to try all possible options before reboot.
All,
I am using SOLARIS 7. I have formated my hard drive to consist of only 150MB of swap space. This isn't enough considering I am running Oracle. How do I create additional swap space?
Please list sources or commands.
PS mkswap doesn't work on my machine. ( I have swap and... (5 Replies)
Can you help. My server sunning solaris 9 on x86 platform pretty much hung for a few hours... I could not use telnet or ssh to the box - it kept refusing connection. A few hours later - I was able to log in again.
The server has not rebooted but here are the first errors in the messages log... (5 Replies)
Hi,
i have done a blunder here, i increased the swap space on Xen5.6 server machine using below steps :-
1056 dd if=/dev/zero of=/root/myswapfile bs=1M count=1024
1057 ls -l /root/myswapfile
1058 chmod 600 /root/myswapfile
1059 mkswap /root/myswapfile
1060 swapon /root/myswapfile
... (1 Reply)
Dear All,
I have a swap space of 16G available in Sol 10. I have allocated it as a seperate file system. But when the RAM Is full used , the system gets rebooted and the swap is not being used,.
Any reasons for this.
Rgds
Rj (5 Replies)
Hello all,
The issue is
# df -h /tmp
Filesystem size used avail capacity Mounted on
swap 4.0G 4.0G 8.7M 100% /tmp
# du -sh /tmp/
87M /tmp
By now you probably will say that this is open file destriptor issue.
Well no, nothing... (2 Replies)
hi all
I am having a t5240 server in that zone is there in /var/adm/messages i am getting the following warning
WARNING: /zoneroot/zonename-zone/root/tmp: File system full, swap
space limit exceeded
if a swap is getting full what can i do.
Please use code tags next time for your... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: nikhil kasar
2 Replies
LEARN ABOUT REDHAT
free
FREE(1) Linux User's Manual FREE(1)NAME
free - display information about free and used memory on the system
SYNOPSIS
free [-b|-k|-m|-g] [-l] [-o] [-t] [-s delay ] [-c count ]
DESCRIPTION free(1) displays the total amount of free and used physical memory and swap space in the system, as well as the buffers and cache consumed
by the kernel.
OPTIONS
Normal invocation of free(1) does not require any options. The output, however, can be fine-tuned by specifying one or more of the follow-
ing flags:
-b, --bytes
Display output in bytes.
-k, --kb
Display output in kilobytes (KB). This is the default.
-m, --mb
Display output in megabytes (MB).
-g, --gb
Display output in gigabytes (GB).
-l, --lowhigh
Display detailed information about low vs. high memory usage.
-o, --old
Use old format. Specifically, do not display -/+ buffers/cache.
-t, --total
Display total summary for physical memory + swap space.
-c n, --count=n
Display statistics n times, then exit. Used in conjunction with the -s flag. Default is to display only once, unless -s was speci-
fied, in which case default is to repeat until interrupted.
-s n, --repeat=n
Repeat, pausing every n seconds in-between.
-V, --version
Display version information and exit.
--help Display usage information and exit
FILES
/proc/meminfo -- memory information
SEE ALSO ps(1), top(1), vmstat(1)AUTHORS
Written by Robert Love.
The procps package is maintained by Rik van Riel and Robert Love and was created by Michael Johnson.
Send bug reports to <procps-list@redhat.com>.
Linux 18 Nov 2002 FREE(1)