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Operating Systems Solaris Find memory usage for a process Post 303001782 by yashreads on Friday 11th of August 2017 05:45:10 AM
Old 08-11-2017
Running ipcs -m gave me
Code:
oraent@DBSRV1 $
oraent@DBSRV1 $ ipcs -m
IPC status from <running system> as of Friday, August 11, 2017 03:07:22 PM IST
T         ID      KEY        MODE        OWNER    GROUP
Shared Memory:
m         15   0x3f81fc70 --rw-r-----   oraent oinstall
m         14   0x0        --rw-r-----   oraent oinstall
m         13   0x0        --rw-r-----   oraent oinstall
m          7   0xeb0a8b74 --rw-r-----   oraent oinstall
m          6   0x0        --rw-r-----   oraent oinstall
m          5   0x0        --rw-r-----   oraent oinstall
m          3   0xf6b11ac0 --rw-r-----   oraent oinstall
m          2   0x0        --rw-r-----   oraent oinstall
m          1   0x0        --rw-r-----   oraent oinstall
You have new mail in /var/mail/oraent
oraent@DBSRV1 $
oraent@DBSRV1 $

The oracle database allocates memory equivalent to the SGA parameter.
Thsi is needed to only start the database and to keep it running.
But as new user connect to the database and perform theis tasks. Each user has its own process on the server. This process consumes memory.

So, such connections per database differs.
In my case i have three database opn the server.
Out of the three, one database consumes apporx 80% of the CPU and memory. This is just an estimate depending on the number of connections see at the database level.
Thats why i need to find the memory usage per database.
 

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MAKEBEAROFF(6)							   Games Manual 						    MAKEBEAROFF(6)

NAME
makebearoff - generate a GNU Backgammon bearoff database SYNOPSIS
makebearoff [-HCcgnvh] -f filename [-t PxC] [-o P] [-s cache-size] [-O filename] DESCRIPTION
makebearoff generates GNU Backgammon bearoff databases, which are used to improve play in the endgame. It can generate either two-sided (exact) databases that tell precisely the chance of winning or one-sided (approximate) databases that provide a variety of probabilities looking at each side independently. Bearoff databases can get quite large and can take a significant amount of time to generate for large numbers of chequers and/or points. OPTIONS
-f filename, --outfile filename Write the bearoff database to filename. This option must be given. -t PxC, --two-sided PxC Generate a two-sided bearoff database for P points and C chequers for each player. Be warned that the size of the database grows rapidly with larger numbers of points and chequers. -o P, --one-sided P Generate a one-sided bearoff database for P points. One-sided bearoff databases are always generated for up to fifteen chequers. -s N, --xhash-size N Use a memory cache of size N while building the database. If the cache is smaller than the database size, database generation will be slower due to disk writes. -O filename, --old-bearoff filename Reuse an already generated bearoff database. Any needed data already in this database will just be copied without regenerating it. -H, --no-header Do not write the normal bearoff database header. -C, --no-cubeful Do not calculate cubeful equities for two-sided databases. -c, --no-compress Do not compress one-sided databases. -g, --no-gammons Do not include gammon distributions in one-sided databases. -n, --normal-dist Rather than storing exact probabilities, approximate probabilities in a one-sided database with a normal distribution. -v, --version Show version information and exit. -h, --help Display usage and exit. EXAMPLES
To generate a two-sided database for up to eight chequers on six points: makebearoff -t 6x8 -f gnubg_ts.bd Note that this database is 72MB in size. To generate a one-sided database for up to fifteen chequers on ten points: makebearoff -o 10 -f gnubg_os.bd Note that this database is 118MB in size. SEE ALSO
gnubg(6), bearoffdump(6) AUTHORS
Joseph Heled, Oystein Johansen, Jorn Thyssen, and Gary Wong, with the assistance of many others <bug-gnubg@gnu.org>. This manual page was written by Russ Allbery <rra@debian.org>, for the Debian GNU/Linux system (but may be used by others). It may be redistributed and/or modified under the terms of version 2 of the GNU General Public License as published by the Free Software Foundation (the same license as GNU Backgammon). 2006-01-15 MAKEBEAROFF(6)
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