That's the "-n" option, not the "-s" option. I was correct about "-f". Sorry if I confused anyone.
-Steve On 6/27/07 11:00 AM, "Steve Grimm" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > You can use the "-s" and "-f" options to change, respectively, the minimum > chunk size (on which the other chunk sizes are based) and the multiplier > that determines how many chunk sizes there are. The formula is > > chunk size(0) = whatever you specify with -s, plus space for object header > chunk size(n) = chunk size(n-1) * multiplier specified with -f > > where each chunk size is rounded up to sizeof(void *) (8 bytes on a 64-bit > system). So by playing with the -s and -f options you can fine-tune the > sizing. > > -Steve > > > On 6/27/07 7:29 AM, "mimmo pasticcio" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > >> I'm using memcached to serve XML files between Apache, I'm reading >> about memory management and "slabs" subsystem. I want to understand >> how the fixed-size memory chunks determines memory management. >> In other word my question is that: it's possible (and it is right) to >> change the size of chunks classes? >> I understand that there are some planned goals but if there is a trunk >> please tell me. >> >> thanks for all. >> >> domenico >
