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Full Discussion: %memused is high
Operating Systems Linux Red Hat %memused is high Post 302992084 by anil529 on Tuesday 21st of February 2017 11:16:40 AM
Old 02-21-2017
Code:
# lscpu
Architecture:          x86_64
CPU op-mode(s):        32-bit, 64-bit
Byte Order:            Little Endian
CPU(s):                4
On-line CPU(s) list:   0-3
Thread(s) per core:    1
Core(s) per socket:    1
Socket(s):             4
NUMA node(s):          1
Vendor ID:             GenuineIntel
CPU family:            6
Model:                 62
Model name:            Intel(R) Xeon(R) CPU E5-2643 v2 @ 3.50GHz
Stepping:              4
CPU MHz:               3499.810
BogoMIPS:              6999.99
Hypervisor vendor:     VMware
Virtualization type:   full
L1d cache:             32K
L1i cache:             32K
L2 cache:              256K
L3 cache:              25600K
NUMA node0 CPU(s):     0-3




paging  getconf PAGESIZE
4096


avg-cpu:  %user   %nice %system %iowait  %steal   %idle
           2.85    0.05    0.51    0.07    0.00   96.53

Device:            tps    kB_read/s    kB_wrtn/s    kB_read    kB_wrtn
sdc               5.00       200.43        24.87   98583358   12234372
sda               0.47         1.97        26.50     970878   13033637
sdb               0.77        23.65        61.56   11632840   30280515
dm-0              0.08         1.41         0.15     692727      75933
dm-1              0.09         0.10         0.25      50168     122304
dm-2              5.84       224.08        86.44  110215182   42514888
dm-3              0.02         0.24         0.04     119390      21436
dm-4              0.09         0.05         0.47      26330     231148
dm-5              0.01         0.05         0.02      26430       9073
dm-6              0.00         0.01         0.00       4077       2060
dm-7              0.12         0.04         0.46      17428     225745
dm-8              0.17         0.01        24.98       3242   12288489
dm-9              0.02         0.01         0.07       5800      35801



Application is used to enter data and tracking , graphical representation



Moderator's Comments:
Mod Comment Please use CODE tags as required by forum rules!

Last edited by RudiC; 02-21-2017 at 12:44 PM.. Reason: Added CODE tags.
 

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SLABINFO(5)							   Linux manual 						       SLABINFO(5)

NAME
/proc/slabinfo - Kernel slab allocator statistics SYNOPSIS
cat /proc/slabinfo DESCRIPTION
Frequently used objects in the Linux kernel (buffer heads, inodes, dentries, etc.) have their own cache. The file /proc/slabinfo gives statistics. For example: % cat /proc/slabinfo slabinfo - version: 1.1 kmem_cache 60 78 100 2 2 1 blkdev_requests 5120 5120 96 128 128 1 mnt_cache 20 40 96 1 1 1 inode_cache 7005 14792 480 1598 1849 1 dentry_cache 5469 5880 128 183 196 1 filp 726 760 96 19 19 1 buffer_head 67131 71240 96 1776 1781 1 vm_area_struct 1204 1652 64 23 28 1 ... size-8192 1 17 8192 1 17 2 size-4096 41 73 4096 41 73 1 ... For each slab cache, the cache name, the number of currently active objects, the total number of available objects, the size of each object in bytes, the number of pages with at least one active object, the total number of allocated pages, and the number of pages per slab are given. Note that because of object alignment and slab cache overhead, objects are not normally packed tightly into pages. Pages with even one in- use object are considered in-use and cannot be freed. Kernels compiled with slab cache statistics will also have "(statistics)" in the first line of output, and will have 5 additional columns, namely: the high water mark of active objects; the number of times objects have been allocated; the number of times the cache has grown (new pages added to this cache); the number of times the cache has been reaped (unused pages removed from this cache); and the number of times there was an error allocating new pages to this cache. If slab cache statistics are not enabled for this kernel, these columns will not be shown. SMP systems will also have "(SMP)" in the first line of output, and will have two additional columns for each slab, reporting the slab allocation policy for the CPU-local cache (to reduce the need for inter-CPU synchronization when allocating objects from the cache). The first column is the per-CPU limit: the maximum number of objects that will be cached for each CPU. The second column is the batchcount: the maximum number of free objects in the global cache that will be transferred to the per-CPU cache if it is empty, or the number of objects to be returned to the global cache if the per-CPU cache is full. If both slab cache statistics and SMP are defined, there will be four additional columns, reporting the per-CPU cache statistics. The first two are the per-CPU cache allocation hit and miss counts: the number of times an object was or was not available in the per-CPU cache for allocation. The next two are the per-CPU cache free hit and miss counts: the number of times a freed object could or could not fit within the per-CPU cache limit, before flushing objects to the global cache. It is possible to tune the SMP per-CPU slab cache limit and batchcount via: echo "cache_name limit batchcount" > /proc/slabinfo AVAILABILITY
/proc/slabinfo exists since Linux 2.1.23. SMP per-CPU caches exist since Linux 2.4.0-test3. FILES
<linux/slab.h> 2001-06-19 SLABINFO(5)
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