memory leak
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Brian LaMere blamere at diversa.comWed Dec 18 07:26:04 PST 2002
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Problem is that its not a matter of whether the memory is really being used. It's a matter of what is occurring to file caching. I don't care at all what free says, other than the fact that I wish I knew bdflush better, or such. Ths important factor is that this behavior did not occur until a month ago, nothing seemingly important changed around that time, and the only way to fix it is to reboot the cluster. Once rebooted, they perform literally 100 times better. If getting 100 times better performance when you reboot after a week's time sounds normal to this list, then I guess I'll join another :/ For the life of me, I can't tell where else to look. I've got stock (default) settings for the kernel's use of memory. I've dug around for a while now, unable to make heads or tails of anything. I'm merely asking for suggestions as to what to look at, etc. I'm going to set on some ethereal monitoring of the traffic, and verify a few things on that end that seem relatively obvious. Beyond that... ? Brian -----Original Message----- From: Vann H. Walke [mailto:walkev at presearch.com] Sent: Wednesday, December 18, 2002 5:09 AM To: John Hearns Cc: Brian LaMere; beowulf at beowulf.org Subject: Re: memory leak I agree that this seems like the most likely source of your problem. Unfortunately with the current Linux kernels obtaining clear memory usage information is difficult. The only way I know to really test memory usage is to write a simple program that attempts to malloc large areas of memory - If the malloc succeeds, the memory wasn't really being used. If you read back through the archives you should find some other messages relating to the problem and perhaps even some test code. Good luck, Vann On Wed, 2002-12-18 at 05:44, John Hearns wrote: > Brian, please forgive me if I am insulting your intelligence. > > But are you sure that you are not just noticing the disk > buffering behaviour of Linux? > The Linux kernel will use up spare memory as disk buffers - > leading an (apparently) lack of free memory. > This is not really the case - as the memory will be released > again when needed. > (Ahem. Was caught out by this too the first time I saw it...) > > > Anyway, if this isn't the problem, maybe you could send > us some of the stats from your system? > Maybe use nfsstat? > > > _______________________________________________ > Beowulf mailing list, Beowulf at beowulf.org > To change your subscription (digest mode or unsubscribe) visit http://www.beowulf.org/mailman/listinfo/beowulf >
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