On Sat, 24 Feb 2001, Joseph Bueno wrote:
> Rik van Riel a écrit :
> > On 23 Feb 2001, Adam Sampson wrote:
> >
> > > The VM balancing updates in the recent ac kernels seem to have caused
> > > some interesting performance problems on my desktop machine. I've got
> > > 160Mb of RAM, and 2.4.2-ac1 appears to be using excessively large
> > > amounts of it for buffers and cache while pushing stuff out to
> > > swap. This means that Mozilla, for instance, runs significantly worse
> > > than under 2.4.0, since bits of it are being swapped in and out.
> >
> > This is a known problem which I'll fix as soon as I have a
> > solution.
> >
> > The problem is that we still have no good way to balance
> > how much memory we take from the cache and how much memory
> > we take from processes.
> I understand that auto-balancing code that deals with all
> situations is very hard to design; so let me share my experience
> on other Unix systems (from a user/administrator point of view):
>
> I have used Unix systems (mainly HPUX) for several years as personal
> workstations or servers and buffer cache usage were very differents:
>
> On workstations, you are mainly looking for fast interactive response
> time and you want to dedicate as much memory as possible to running
> processes so limiting buffer cache to 10% of physical memory (these
> workstations had typically 32 - 64 Mb of RAM) was good.
"Unfortunately" the cache also contains _process memory_ in
Linux. Limiting the cache to 10% also means limiting the
code size of all your processes to something smaller than
that.
Also, read-in swap pages are in the so-called swap cache,
which is also part of the page cache.
This means that simple limits on cache size probably won't do
much good on Linux.
regards,
Rik
-- Virtual memory is like a game you can't win; However, without VM there's truly nothing to lose...http://www.surriel.com/ http://www.conectiva.com/ http://distro.conectiva.com.br/
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This archive was generated by hypermail 2b29 : Wed Feb 28 2001 - 21:00:08 EST