Am Freitag 25 Dezember 2009 15:45:29 schrieb Gwern Branwen: > On Fri, Dec 25, 2009 at 5:14 AM, Svein Ove Aas <svein....@aas.no> wrote: > > On Thu, Dec 24, 2009 at 11:38 PM, Roman Cheplyaka <r...@ro-che.info> wrote: > >> So, let's think what we can do at runtime. Suppose RTS takes the > >> parameter -- upper limit of consumed memory. When it sees that memory > >> consumption is close to upper bound, it can: > >> > >> 1. force garbage collection > > > > This is already implemented. See the -M RTS option. > > Correct me if I'm wrong - it's been a while since I tried to use the > -M option to deal with Gitit memory usage on darcs.net - but doesn't > -M just kill the program after it reaches a set RAM, and doesn't > trigger any GCs?
It does affect GC behaviour. According to the user's guide: " -Msize [Default: unlimited] Set the maximum heap size to size bytes. The heap normally grows and shrinks according to the memory requirements of the program. The only reason for having this option is to stop the heap growing without bound and filling up all the available swap space, which at the least will result in the program being summarily killed by the operating system. The maximum heap size also affects other garbage collection parameters: when the amount of live data in the heap exceeds a certain fraction of the maximum heap size, compacting collection will be automatically enabled for the oldest generation, and the -F parameter will be reduced in order to avoid exceeding the maximum heap size." Reducing the -F parameter (amount of memory reserved for the older generations as a factor of the amount of live data) triggers more GCs. So it tries to not exceed the limit you've given. You can indeed reduce the memory used by your programme via the -M option, but only to some extent. As far as I know it will not collect data held on to by live data to be reconstructed later if needed again.
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