Dave Brodin:
> 84 processes:  13 running, 71 sleeping
> CPU:  1.9% user,  0.0% nice, 98.1% system,  0.0% interrupt,  0.0% idle
> Mem: 171M Active, 6548M Inact, 842M Wired, 246M Cache, 827M Buf, 104M Free
> Swap: 4096M Total, 60K Used, 4096M Free
>
>    PID USERNAME       THR PRI NICE   SIZE    RES STATE   C   TIME   WCPU
> COMMAND
>   3350 postfix          1 100    0 37580K  5572K RUN     4   0:08 25.32%
> smtpd
>   3353 postfix          1 100    0 37580K  5572K RUN     7   0:08 25.31%
> smtpd
>   3351 postfix          1  20    0 37580K  5572K lockf   3   0:07 23.97%
> smtpd
>   3354 postfix          1  99    0 37580K  5572K CPU1    7   0:07 23.97%
> smtpd
>   3357 postfix          1  99    0 37580K  5572K CPU4    6   0:07 23.65%
> smtpd
>   3371 postfix          1 100    0 37580K  5572K CPU5    3   0:06 23.26%
> smtpd
>   3368 postfix          1 100    0 37580K  5572K CPU6    1   0:06 22.99%
> smtpd

I have never seen smtpd use up significant amounts of CPU, except
with Stan Hoeppner's extremely large PCRE or CIDR tables.

How does this configuration differ from the machine that "works"?

> > How bit is the "passwd" file? What's in nsswitch.conf or
> > equivalent for "passwd"?
> 
> There are 18,983 entries in the passwd file.
> 
> This is my nsswitch.com:
> 
> group: compat
> group_compat: nis
> hosts: files dns
> networks: files
> passwd: compat
> passwd_compat: nis
> shells: files
> services: compat
> services_compat: nis
> protocols: files
> rpc: files

That's the default for FreeBSD, which uses Berkeley DB for password
and group files (I'm running FreeBSD 8.X here).

        Wietse

Reply via email to