I've been having confounding out-of-memory problems with 2.4.16 on my
1.4MHz Athlon with 1 GB of memory (2 GB of swap). I just caught it in
the act and I think it relates to some of the weirdness others have been
reporting.
I'm running RedHat 7.2. After bootup, it runs a program called updatedb
(slocate -u) which does a lot of file i/o as it indexes all the files on
my hard drives. Following this action, my machine is in a state which
make many applications give "cannot allocate memory" errors. It seems
the kernel is not freeing up buffered or cached memory, and even more
troubling is the fact that it isn't using any of my swap space.
Here is the state of the machine after updatedb runs:
home[1006]:/home/orf% free
total used free shared buffers cached
Mem: 1029820 1021252 8568 0 471036 90664
-/+ buffers/cache: 459552 570268
Swap: 2064344 0 2064344
home[1003]:/home/orf% cat /proc/meminfo
total: used: free: shared: buffers: cached:
Mem: 1054535680 1045901312 8634368 0 480497664 93954048
Swap: 2113888256 0 2113888256
MemTotal: 1029820 kB
MemFree: 8432 kB
MemShared: 0 kB
Buffers: 469236 kB
Cached: 91752 kB
SwapCached: 0 kB
Active: 383812 kB
Inactive: 229016 kB
HighTotal: 130992 kB
HighFree: 2044 kB
LowTotal: 898828 kB
LowFree: 6388 kB
SwapTotal: 2064344 kB
SwapFree: 2064344 kB
home[1005]:/home/orf% cat /proc/slabinfo
slabinfo - version: 1.1
kmem_cache 65 68 112 2 2 1
ip_conntrack 9 50 384 4 5 1
nfs_write_data 0 0 384 0 0 1
nfs_read_data 0 0 384 0 0 1
nfs_page 0 0 128 0 0 1
ip_fib_hash 10 112 32 1 1 1
urb_priv 0 0 64 0 0 1
clip_arp_cache 0 0 128 0 0 1
ip_mrt_cache 0 0 128 0 0 1
tcp_tw_bucket 0 0 128 0 0 1
tcp_bind_bucket 8 112 32 1 1 1
tcp_open_request 0 0 128 0 0 1
inet_peer_cache 4 59 64 1 1 1
ip_dst_cache 27 40 192 2 2 1
arp_cache 3 30 128 1 1 1
blkdev_requests 640 660 128 22 22 1
journal_head 0 0 48 0 0 1
revoke_table 0 0 12 0 0 1
revoke_record 0 0 32 0 0 1
dnotify cache 0 0 20 0 0 1
file lock cache 2 42 92 1 1 1
fasync cache 2 202 16 1 1 1
uid_cache 5 112 32 1 1 1
skbuff_head_cache 327 340 192 17 17 1
sock 188 198 1280 66 66 1
sigqueue 2 29 132 1 1 1
cdev_cache 2313 2360 64 40 40 1
bdev_cache 8 59 64 1 1 1
mnt_cache 19 59 64 1 1 1
inode_cache 439584 439586 512 62798 62798 1
dentry_cache 454136 454200 128 15140 15140 1
dquot 0 0 128 0 0 1
filp 1471 1500 128 50 50 1
names_cache 0 2 4096 0 2 1
buffer_head 144413 173280 128 5776 5776 1
mm_struct 57 80 192 4 4 1
vm_area_struct 2325 2760 128 92 92 1
fs_cache 56 118 64 2 2 1
files_cache 56 72 448 8 8 1
signal_act 64 72 1344 24 24 1
size-131072(DMA) 0 0 131072 0 0 32
size-131072 0 0 131072 0 0 32
size-65536(DMA) 0 0 65536 0 0 16
size-65536 1 1 65536 1 1 16
size-32768(DMA) 0 0 32768 0 0 8
size-32768 1 1 32768 1 1 8
size-16384(DMA) 0 0 16384 0 0 4
size-16384 1 1 16384 1 1 4
size-8192(DMA) 0 0 8192 0 0 2
size-8192 4 4 8192 4 4 2
size-4096(DMA) 0 0 4096 0 0 1
size-4096 64 68 4096 64 68 1
size-2048(DMA) 0 0 2048 0 0 1
size-2048 52 66 2048 27 33 1
size-1024(DMA) 0 0 1024 0 0 1
size-1024 11042 11048 1024 2762 2762 1
size-512(DMA) 0 0 512 0 0 1
size-512 12004 12016 512 1501 1502 1
size-256(DMA) 0 0 256 0 0 1
size-256 1678 1695 256 113 113 1
size-128(DMA) 2 30 128 1 1 1
size-128 29398 29430 128 980 981 1
size-64(DMA) 0 0 64 0 0 1
size-64 7954 7965 64 135 135 1
size-32(DMA) 34 59 64 1 1 1
size-32 66711 66729 64 1131 1131 1
Now, I try to run a common application:
home[1031]:/home/orf% xmms
Memory fault
Strace on xmms shows:
home[1008]:/home/orf/memfuck% cat xmms.strace
[snip]
modify_ldt(0x1, 0xbffff1fc, 0x10) = -1 ENOMEM (Cannot allocate memory)
--- SIGSEGV (Segmentation fault) ---
+++ killed by SIGSEGV +++
Also, from my syslog (I have an ntfs partition):
Dec 8 09:55:01 orp kernel: NTFS: ntfs_insert_run: ntfs_vmalloc(new_size = 0x1000) failed
Dec 8 09:55:01 orp kernel: NTFS: ntfs_process_runs: ntfs_insert_run failed
Dec 8 09:55:01 orp kernel: NTFS: ntfs_getdir_unsorted(): Read failed. Returning error code -95.
Dec 8 09:55:01 orp kernel: NTFS: ntfs_insert_run: ntfs_vmalloc(new_size = 0x1000) failed
Dec 8 09:55:01 orp kernel: NTFS: ntfs_process_runs: ntfs_insert_run failed
Dec 8 09:55:01 orp kernel: NTFS: ntfs_getdir_unsorted(): Read failed. Returning error code -95.
Dec 8 09:55:01 orp kernel: NTFS: ntfs_insert_run: ntfs_vmalloc(new_size = 0x1000) failed
Dec 8 09:55:01 orp kernel: NTFS: ntfs_process_runs: ntfs_insert_run failed
Dec 8 09:55:01 orp kernel: NTFS: ntfs_insert_run: ntfs_vmalloc(new_size = 0x1000) failed
Dec 8 09:55:01 orp kernel: NTFS: ntfs_process_runs: ntfs_insert_run failed
The program nautilus, which is involved with the Gnome windowing stuff,
also complains it can't allocate memory if I log into the console after
udpatedb has run (that's what clued me into this problem in the first
place).
The only way I can find to make the system usable is to run an
application which aggressively recovers some of this buffered/cached
memory, and quit it. One easy way to do this:
home[1014]:/home/orf% lmdd opat=1 count=1 bs=900m
After I do this, much free memory is available.
Some applications are able to "reclaim" the buffered/cached memory,
while others aren't. Netscape doesn't have a problem, for instance,
running after updatedb runs.
This is a pretty serious problem. Interestingly enough, it does NOT
occur on my other machine, running same kernel and RH7.2, with 256M
memory and 512M swap.
Leigh Orf
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This archive was generated by hypermail 2b29 : Sat Dec 15 2001 - 21:00:12 EST