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Operating Systems Linux Red Hat Does it make sense to reduce the total shared memory Post 302992250 by gandolf989 on Thursday 23rd of February 2017 10:40:13 AM
Old 02-23-2017
Hi Robin, We are mostly using Oracle 11.2.0.3 and 12.1.0.2. Some of our servers are in the AWS cloud and I can change OS parameters there. But for the servers that are running out of our server room, I need to justify any OS changes that I want. By default the servers allocate half the total memory to shared memory whether or not we are using AMM, or shared memory. Hence, I am trying to figure out what benefits we would get from shrinking /dev/shm on servers where we aren't using shared memory. Would it even make a difference.

---------- Post updated at 10:40 AM ---------- Previous update was at 10:11 AM ----------

For example, I increased the AMM memory on two databases on this server
from 1GB to 3GB, and the total memory allocated when down.

It just seems like Redhat is holding onto shared memory that would be better
off not being shred memory, thus reducing the amount of swap being used.
There are 12 databases on this server, most do not use shared memory.

Code:
BEFORE INCREASE
$: ~ > free -m
             total       used       free     shared    buffers     cached
Mem:         32186      31987        198          0        872      26785
-/+ buffers/cache:       4329      27856
Swap:        20474       4340      16133

$: ~ > df -h /dev/shm
Filesystem            Size  Used Avail Use% Mounted on
tmpfs                  26G  5.4G   20G  22% /dev/shm

AFTER INCREASE
$: ~/scripts/sql > free -m
             total       used       free     shared    buffers     cached
Mem:         32186      29764       2421          0       1038      24912
-/+ buffers/cache:       3813      28372
Swap:        20474       4254      16220

$: ~/scripts/sql > df -h /dev/shm
Filesystem            Size  Used Avail Use% Mounted on
tmpfs                  26G  8.1G   18G  32% /dev/shm

 

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FREE(1)                                                            User Commands                                                           FREE(1)

NAME
free - Display amount of free and used memory in the system SYNOPSIS
free [options] DESCRIPTION
free displays the total amount of free and used physical and swap memory in the system, as well as the buffers and caches used by the ker- nel. The information is gathered by parsing /proc/meminfo. The displayed columns are: total Total installed memory (MemTotal and SwapTotal in /proc/meminfo) used Used memory (calculated as total - free - buffers - cache) free Unused memory (MemFree and SwapFree in /proc/meminfo) shared Memory used (mostly) by tmpfs (Shmem in /proc/meminfo) buffers Memory used by kernel buffers (Buffers in /proc/meminfo) cache Memory used by the page cache and slabs (Cached and SReclaimable in /proc/meminfo) buff/cache Sum of buffers and cache available Estimation of how much memory is available for starting new applications, without swapping. Unlike the data provided by the cache or free fields, this field takes into account page cache and also that not all reclaimable memory slabs will be reclaimed due to items being in use (MemAvailable in /proc/meminfo, available on kernels 3.14, emulated on kernels 2.6.27+, otherwise the same as free) OPTIONS
-b, --bytes Display the amount of memory in bytes. -k, --kibi Display the amount of memory in kibibytes. This is the default. -m, --mebi Display the amount of memory in mebibytes. -g, --gibi Display the amount of memory in gibibytes. --tebi Display the amount of memory in tebibytes. --pebi Display the amount of memory in pebibytes. --kilo Display the amount of memory in kilobytes. Implies --si. --mega Display the amount of memory in megabytes. Implies --si. --giga Display the amount of memory in gigabytes. Implies --si. --tera Display the amount of memory in terabytes. Implies --si. --peta Display the amount of memory in petabytes. Implies --si. -h, --human Show all output fields automatically scaled to shortest three digit unit and display the units of print out. Following units are used. B = bytes K = kibibyte M = mebibyte G = gibibyte T = tebibyte P = pebibyte If unit is missing, and you have exbibyte of RAM or swap, the number is in tebibytes and columns might not be aligned with header. -w, --wide Switch to the wide mode. The wide mode produces lines longer than 80 characters. In this mode buffers and cache are reported in two separate columns. -c, --count count Display the result count times. Requires the -s option. -l, --lohi Show detailed low and high memory statistics. -s, --seconds delay Continuously display the result delay seconds apart. You may actually specify any floating point number for delay using either . or , for decimal point. usleep(3) is used for microsecond resolution delay times. --si Use kilo, mega, giga etc (power of 1000) instead of kibi, mebi, gibi (power of 1024). -t, --total Display a line showing the column totals. --help Print help. -V, --version Display version information. FILES
/proc/meminfo memory information BUGS
The value for the shared column is not available from kernels before 2.6.32 and is displayed as zero. Please send bug reports to <procps@freelists.org> SEE ALSO
ps(1), slabtop(1), top(1), vmstat(8). procps-ng 2016-06-03 FREE(1)
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