Andrew Rodland <arodland@noln.com> writes:
> On 21 Jul 2002 16:00:09 +0200
> mru@users.sourceforge.net (M) wrote:
>
> >
> > I noticed that doing lots or file accesses causes the used memory to
> > increase, *after* subtracting buffers/cache. Here is an example:
> >
> > $ free
> > total used free shared buffers
> > cached
> > Mem: 773776 30024 743752 0 1992
> > 10424-/+ buffers/cache: 17608 756168
> > Swap: 81904 0 81904
> > $ du > /dev/null
> > $ free
> > total used free shared buffers
> > cached
> > Mem: 773776 78008 695768 0 26328
> > 10472-/+ buffers/cache: 41208 732568
> > Swap: 81904 0 81904
> >
> > Here 24 MB of memory have been used up. Repeating the du seems to have
> > little effect. This directory has ~3200 subdirs and 13400 files.
> >
> > After a few hours use about 200 MB are used, apperently for
> > nothing. Killing all processed and unmounting file systems doesn't
> > help.
> >
> > Is this a memory leak? I get the same results with ext2, ext3,
> > reiserfs and nfs.
>
> wow!
> I've been seeing this, too, but I thought I was just reading something
> wrong. Especially after my nightly cron jobs (which involve a 'find
> /') run, I'll often find myself with 80% of physical RAM used, and
> nobody (as far as 'top' can see) using it. You didn't specify which
> kernel you're using, but I'm running 2.4.19-rc1-ac1 plus some patches,
> and I've seen it since at least about pre9-ac*. I might try to narrow it
> down more if it could be useful.
I forgot to mention the kernel version. It's 2.4.19-rc3. It's been
going on a while, though, before I took the time start looking for it.
-- Måns Rullgård mru@users.sf.net - To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-kernel" in the body of a message to majordomo@vger.kernel.org More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html Please read the FAQ at http://www.tux.org/lkml/
This archive was generated by hypermail 2b29 : Tue Jul 23 2002 - 22:00:35 EST