> > On 08/30/2011 04:56 AM, robinprice@... wrote: > > > > > > I would also encourage a lot of you to open a support case regarding > > this issue. But I know some of you are using other alternatives, so I > > will assist the best I can. I hope the latest --changelog might > > assist. I can't find anything related to said memory leak but will > > look more into it tomorrow. > > > > [rprice <at> x200 ~]$ uname -a> rhel6.1-changelog.txt > > [rprice <at> x200 ~]$ echo "---">> rhel6.1-changelog.txt > > [rprice <at> x200 ~]$ rpm -qa kernel --changelog>> rhel6.1-changelog.txt > > > > http://people.redhat.com/rprice/rhel6.1-changelog.txt > > > > ~rp > > > > _______________________________________________ > > rhelv6-list mailing list > > rhelv6-list@... > > https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/rhelv6-list > > > Well I am using a really old kernel so maybe I just have to wait for my > distro to release the newer version. The one I am using is: > > 2.6.32-71.29.1.el6.x86_64 #1 SMP Mon Jun 27 > > And the latest one is > > 2.6.32-131.12.1 > >
The newest kernel with patches (from SL and COPlus) 2.6.32-131.12.1 does NOT fix the issue at all. In my case, I have been running a dual web service machine with 100 hits a day. Ram starts increasing when I compile anything. Started mail services and by the time I woke up next morning, I was like 'Woaaaaah, wtf'. 3 out of 8GB consumed in cache. The leak is really annoying; it adds 2-5 contiguous MBs every few minutes and has risked the production environment a lot; tracing the kernel events doesn't reveal anything particularly related. CentOS 6, I will see you in two years. CentOS 5, welcome back traitor. _______________________________________________ rhelv6-list mailing list [email protected] https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/rhelv6-list
