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Operating Systems Solaris Monitoring Paging and Swapping Post 303027429 by jlliagre on Saturday 15th of December 2018 10:31:14 AM
Old 12-15-2018
Quote:
Originally Posted by javanoob
Back to the reason on the post

- I have 3GB of swap disk used (in swap -l)
- I have 10GB+ of free physical RAM
- I have 0 scanrate and vmstat available swap = 37GB

Since i am 10G of physical ram and 0 SR - i am not short on ram
Since i have 37GB of virtual swap available - i am not short on virtual swap

What could have contributed to the 3GB swap disk ?
Three gigabytes of memory were used (i.e. read/written) sometime in the past by some process(es). They have not been accessed for a while so the kernel decided to put the data on disk, to keep the free RAM high.
Quote:
Could it be at some point of time, i am running low on physical ram and swap/paging need to be done ?
You need not to starve on RAM for paging to occur.
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When does physical space used in swapdisk be release ?
When the processes owning it will die.
Quote:
It is gradually increasing (slow.. but like 5-10MB more of swapdisk used per week) - that is the worrying part.
That might be just some optimization done by the kernel.
There might be a memory leak in a process, 10 MB per week is not among the fiercest ones.
There might be a growing file in /tmp or any tmpfs based file system. The storage area of tmpfs is virtual memory (not any process virtual memory but the OS virtual memory, i.e. RAM + SWAP as Bakunin wrote).

Note also the free memory might be actually used by the kernel, which isn't constrained by process virtual memory rules.

Solaris uses free memory as UFS and NFS cache, so this free memory contains actual data, but it is nevertheless reported as free by vmstat and similar commands, because it is immediately available for processes allocations.

Last edited by jlliagre; 12-15-2018 at 06:36 PM..
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tmpfs(7FS)							   File Systems 							tmpfs(7FS)

NAME
tmpfs - memory based file system SYNOPSIS
#include <sys/mount.h> mount (special, directory, MS_DATA, "tmpfs", NULL, 0); DESCRIPTION
tmpfs is a memory based file system which uses kernel resources relating to the VM system and page cache as a file system. Once mounted, a tmpfs file system provides standard file operations and semantics. tmpfs is so named because files and directories are not preserved across reboot or unmounts, all files residing on a tmpfs file system that is unmounted will be lost. tmpfs file systems can be mounted with the command: mount -F tmpfs swap directory Alternatively, to mount a tmpfs file system on /tmp at multi-user startup time (maximizing possible performance improvements), add the following line to /etc/vfstab: swap -/tmp tmpfs - yes - tmpfs is designed as a performance enhancement which is achieved by caching the writes to files residing on a tmpfs file system. Perfor- mance improvements are most noticeable when a large number of short lived files are written and accessed on a tmpfs file system. Large com- pilations with tmpfs mounted on /tmp are a good example of this. Users of tmpfs should be aware of some constraints involved in mounting a tmpfs file system. The resources used by tmpfs are the same as those used when commands are executed (for example, swap space allocation). This means that large sized tmpfs files can affect the amount of space left over for programs to execute. Likewise, programs requiring large amounts of memory use up the space available to tmpfs. Users running into this constraint (for example, running out of space on tmpfs) can allocate more swap space by using the swap(1M) command. Another constraint is that the number of files available in a tmpfs file system is calculated based on the physical memory of the machine and not the size of the swap device/partition. If you have too many files, tmpfs will print a warning message and you will be unable to create new files. You cannot increase this limit by adding swap space. Normal file system writes are scheduled to be written to a permanent storage medium along with all control information associated with the file (for example, modification time, file permissions). tmpfs control information resides only in memory and never needs to be written to permanent storage. File data remains in core until memory demands are sufficient to cause pages associated with tmpfs to be reused at which time they are copied out to swap. An additional mount option can be specified to control the size of an individual tmpfs file system. SEE ALSO
df(1M), mount(1M), mount_tmpfs(1M), swap(1M), mmap(2), mount(2), umount(2), vfstab(4) System Administration Guide: Basic Administration DIAGNOSTICS
If tmpfs runs out of space, one of the following messages will display in the console. directory: File system full, swap space limit exceeded This message appears because a page could not be allocated while writing to a file. This can occur if tmpfs is attempting to write more than it is allowed, or if currently executing programs are using a lot of memory. To make more space available, remove unnecessary files, exit from some programs, or allocate more swap space using swap(1M). directory: File system full, memory allocation failed tmpfs ran out of physical memory while attempting to create a new file or directory. Remove unnecessary files or directories or install more physical memory. WARNINGS
Files and directories on a tmpfs file system are not preserved across reboots or unmounts. Command scripts or programs which count on this will not work as expected. NOTES
Compilers do not necessarily use /tmp to write intermediate files therefore missing some significant performance benefits. This can be remedied by setting the environment variable TMPDIR to /tmp. Compilers use the value in this environment variable as the name of the direc- tory to store intermediate files. swap to a tmpfs file is not supported. df(1M) output is of limited accuracy since a tmpfs file system size is not static and the space available to tmpfs is dependent on the swap space demands of the entire system. SunOS 5.11 9 Oct 1990 tmpfs(7FS)
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