which setting defines behaviour when paging space runs full ?


 
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Operating Systems AIX which setting defines behaviour when paging space runs full ?
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Old 08-15-2010
which setting defines behaviour when paging space runs full ?

Hi,

I have a bunch of AIX systems which usually have more than enough memory to live happily. Unfortunately we have on a few of our boxes an rman runaway problem - every now and than after restoring from rman backups, the process goes crazy and eats all memory it could possibly get hold off - sometimes 100 gig and more just in a couple of minutes ... and oracle cannot find the root cause for this for months ...

Since this happens to real business critical DB boxes, my question: does anyone know which memory setting is responsible for the behaviour on an AIX 5.3 lpar when paging space runs full?

I have a few boxes that recycle themselves, others start just forking / hanging / killing randomly processes to survive - where is no point as AIX usually thinks killing the DBs is a great idea - so a system restart would be my preferred behaviour as this is anyways what I have to do when the box hangs - and the boxes that do it themselves save me a lot of paperwork / hazzle - and are usually fine for months afterwards Smilie

I know I know - solving the problem should be highest priority and we are working on it - but until than ... I want restarts Smilie

Kind regards
zxmaus
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MUNLOCK(2)						     Linux Programmer's Manual							MUNLOCK(2)

NAME
munlock - reenable paging for some parts of memory SYNOPSIS
#include <sys/mman.h> int munlock(const void *addr, size_t len); DESCRIPTION
munlock reenables paging for the memory in the range starting at addr with length len bytes. All pages which contain a part of the speci- fied memory range can after calling munlock be moved to external swap space again by the kernel. Memory locks do not stack, i.e., pages which have been locked several times by calls to mlock or mlockall will be unlocked by a single call to munlock for the corresponding range or by munlockall. Pages which are mapped to several locations or by several processes stay locked into RAM as long as they are locked at least at one location or by at least one process. On POSIX systems on which mlock and munlock are available, _POSIX_MEMLOCK_RANGE is defined in <unistd.h> and the value PAGESIZE from <lim- its.h> indicates the number of bytes per page. RETURN VALUE
On success, munlock returns zero. On error, -1 is returned, errno is set appropriately, and no changes are made to any locks in the address space of the process. ERRORS
ENOMEM Some of the specified address range does not correspond to mapped pages in the address space of the process. EINVAL len was not a positive number. CONFORMING TO
POSIX.1b, SVr4 SEE ALSO
mlock(2), mlockall(2), munlockall(2) Linux 1.3.43 1995-11-26 MUNLOCK(2)