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Operating Systems AIX Permanently set maxdata to maximum Post 302954557 by MichaelFelt on Wednesday 9th of September 2015 03:10:58 AM
Old 09-09-2015
Mainly, it depends on how much memory you have in the system, aka partition or virtual machine. note also 0x80000000 is not the maximum (hope i am getting all the zeros right). From memory, it is now up to 13 segments you can use (increase by 12, as one is for kernel, one for code (that too can be increased by one if i recall correctly), and one for device drivers and shared library code and data.

What you lose is segments that are easily shared by programs. However, to minimize that their is an additional setting, but i do not recall that (i.e., i must refer to documentation i do not have handy).

If you do not know it already I recommend you learn to use svmon to monitor how your program is using memory, and hopefully not paging space.

In short, if you are also using shared memory for anything, and you have enough free memory for the process, there should be little to worry about.
 

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IPCS(1) 						    BSD General Commands Manual 						   IPCS(1)

NAME
ipcs -- report System V interprocess communication facilities status SYNOPSIS
ipcs [-abcmopqstMQSTy] [-C core] [-N system] [-u user] DESCRIPTION
The ipcs utility provides information on System V interprocess communication (IPC) facilities on the system. The options are as follows: -a Show the maximum amount of information possible when displaying active semaphores, message queues, and shared memory segments. (This is shorthand for specifying the -b, -c, -o, -p, and -t options.) -b Show the maximum allowed sizes for active semaphores, message queues, and shared memory segments. The ``maximum allowed size'' is the maximum number of bytes in a message on a message queue, the size of a shared memory segment, or the number of semaphores in a set of semaphores. -c Show the creator's name and group for active semaphores, message queues, and shared memory segments. -m Display information about active shared memory segments. -o Show outstanding usage for active message queues, and shared memory segments. The ``outstanding usage'' is the number of messages in a message queue, or the number of processes attached to a shared memory segment. -p Show the process ID information for active semaphores, message queues, and shared memory segments. The ``process ID information'' is the last process to send a message to or receive a message from a message queue, the process that created a semaphore, or the last process to attach or detach a shared memory segment. -q Display information about active message queues. -s Display information about active semaphores. -t Show access times for active semaphores, message queues, and shared memory segments. The access times is the time of the last con- trol operation on an IPC object, the last send or receive of a message, the last attach or detach of a shared memory segment, or the last operation on a semaphore. -C core Extract values associated with the name list from the specified core instead of the default /dev/kmem. Implies -y. -M Display system information about shared memory. -N system Extract the name list from the specified system instead of the default /boot/kernel/kernel. Implies -y. -Q Display system information about messages queues. -S Display system information about semaphores. -T Display system information about shared memory, message queues and semaphores. -y Use the kvm(3) interface instead of the sysctl(3) interface to extract the required information. If ipcs is to operate on the run- ning system, using kvm(3) will require read privileges to /dev/kmem. -u user Display information about IPC mechanisms owned by user. User specification can be in the form of a numeric UID or a login name. If none of the -M, -m, -Q, -q, -S, or -s options are specified, information about all active IPC facilities is listed. RESTRICTIONS
System data structures may change while ipcs is running; the output of ipcs is not guaranteed to be consistent. FILES
/dev/kmem default kernel memory /boot/kernel/kernel default system name list SEE ALSO
ipcrm(1) AUTHORS
Thorsten Lockert <tholo@sigmasoft.com> BUGS
This manual page is woefully incomplete, because it does not at all attempt to explain the information printed by ipcs. BSD
March 24, 2004 BSD
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