When swap is disabled and reenabled, the machine sits normally and there
are no more swap-ins or swap-outs and no more disk access (previously
there would be a few interrupts on the disk controller every time the
loop executed and the "swaped-in" would show a value, indicating that it
was actually being paged in from disk).
This problem seems to be present in 2.0.33, 2.0.35, 2.1.117, and probably
many other kernels.
>From IRC:
--- * peter wonders why this system is so actively doing swap ins all the time. * peter ponders <Simon> without doing swapouts? <peter> Simon: Yup. <Simon> that happens here, too. <Simon> 2.0 and 2.1 :) <Simon> procs memory swap io system cpu <Simon> r b w swpd free buff cache si so bi bo in cs us sy id <Simon> 0 0 0 2720 4404 35208 175504 20 0 5 0 151 60 2 3 95 <Simon> 1 0 0 2720 4368 35208 175536 0 0 0 0 156 91 1 3 96 <Simon> 0 0 0 2720 4596 35208 175504 20 0 5 35 161 66 1 8 91 <Simon> etc <peter> Simon: Any particular reason? <Simon> not sure <peter> 3 0 0 1016 3728 15248 11692 245 0 61 3 612 618 6 27 66 <Simon> it "swaps in" but the "swpd" doesn't change. <peter> Simon: Yeah, that would mean there are swap outs. Which there are none. <MrCurious> simon: maybe it only changes when the swaped in part gets "dirtied" as intil that point, it doesnt need to re-swap it in order to discard it <Simon> ahh <Simon> shouldn't it be pulled out of swap if it gets used that much, though? <Simon> obviously, with 175 megs of cache, there is enough room :) <peter> Simon: Yes, and something else gets swapped out instead. So you should see the swap out counter >0. <Simon> but swapoff -a && swapon -a followed by watching vmstat for a while shows that there's no more swapping <Simon> so it should be taken out of swap..or is it actually not reading the disk? <peter> 6 0 0 0 1076 14092 11464 0 0 0 4 550 495 8 37 56 <peter> You're right. <peter> That would mean the swap code is broken? <Simon> *shrug* :) <Simon> lemme check some other servers <Simon> yup, the same <Simon> 3 0 0 1424 109464 12724 123120 20 0 5 0 473 64 56 14 30 <Simon> 3 0 0 1424 109428 12724 123120 20 0 5 0 289 62 58 14 28 <Simon> 4 0 0 1424 108412 12724 123120 20 0 5 0 215 57 58 12 30 <Simon> 3 0 0 1424 109396 12724 123120 20 0 5 0 109 63 59 12 29 <Simon> constantly swapping 20 every second <Simon> lemme see if the aic is interrupting <Simon> yup, a few interrupts every second <Simon> hrmm..should post this to linux-kernel <peter> Yeah. <peter> What kernel do you run? 2.0.35? <Simon> the machine was sitting there paging in my "jobspawnd" binary which has a main loop of sleep(1); <bunch of checks> <peter> jobspawnd? <Simon> and the scsi device had a few interrupts every second when it was going (I straced it), indicating that was what was happening <peter> Does that fork() many times? <Simon> so it's broken :) <Simon> it fork()s if there's room for another job... <Simon> but in its life it forks millions of times :) <Simon> it's the heart of a web stats server <peter> Simon: Same here, I'm running a proxy firewall that forks() a process for every connection. <Simon> 2.1 on both of these servers right now, but I've noticed it with 2.0 also I think <peter> I'm running 2.0.35. <peter> Maybe it has been in Linux for a long time.---Any ideas?
Please CC back to me any replies. :)
Simon-
| Simon Kirby | Systems Administration | | mailto:sim@netnation.com | NetNation Communications | | http://www.netnation.com/ | Tech: (604) 684-6892 |
- To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-kernel" in the body of a message to majordomo@vger.rutgers.edu Please read the FAQ at http://www.altern.org/andrebalsa/doc/lkml-faq.html