On Aug 26 2007 12:16, Fred Tyler wrote: >> Please rule out filesystem caches by issuing >> sync; >> echo 3 >/proc/sys/vm/drop_caches; > >(Sorry if this goes to the list twice... Mailer problems.) alright..
>Ok, I did this on a non-production machine that has only been up for a >few hours, and here's what happened: > >======== Before ========= > >$ free -m > total used free shared buffers cached >Mem: 878 824 54 0 111 422 >-/+ buffers/cache: 290 587 >Swap: 63 0 63 > > >======== After ======== > >[EMAIL PROTECTED] free -m > total used free shared buffers cached >Mem: 878 47 830 0 6 4 >-/+ buffers/cache: 36 841 >Swap: 63 0 63 > >====================== > >So, I guess it worked? (I don't know what was supposed to happen, but >memory usage dropped significantly when I did this.) So I guess you are not seeing any memory leak at all, but just the regular caching? >However, I'm not sure this staging machine has been up long enough or >doing enough to exhibit the problem. I can try this on my production >servers (the ones I provided graphs for) late tonight, but how safe is >running this command? Does it permanently disable file caching? Do I >need to reset it afterwards? If I stop all services (databases, drop_cache is a trigger, not a setting. Hence your RAM will be used again after you have used drop_caches. >logging, etc) first, am I protected against data loss? Jan -- - To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-kernel" in the body of a message to [EMAIL PROTECTED] More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html Please read the FAQ at http://www.tux.org/lkml/