Followup: interesting results. I've now tried removing the swap altogther (swapoff) and the server appears to be running much smoother and faster.
Here is the new top info: 212 processes: 210 sleeping, 2 running, 0 zombie, 0 stopped CPU states: 8.4% user, 32.2% system, 0.9% nice, 58.2% idle Mem: 1027212K av, 1015440K used, 11772K free, 0K shrd, 186196K buff Swap: 0K av, 0K used, 0K free 370588K cached by the way, most of the processes are httpd and mysql (this is a hosting server). I'm somewhat concerned about having no swap though... any side-effects of running with no swap? As expected, most of the swapped data reverted to RAM by reducing the cache size (by approximately the amount that was used by swap). Hope someone can shed some light on this. I'm looking at the results, but can't understand why it is swapping so aggressively... to the point that it is running itself out of RAM for active programs to increase cache size. Jas ----- Original Message ----- From: "Jason Lim" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> To: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> Sent: Monday, 19 April, 2004 7:31 AM Subject: bdflush or others affecting disk cache > Hi all, > > I've been banging my head on this one for a while now on a 2.4.20 system. > Here is the output of top: > > Mem: 1027212K av, 1018600K used, 8612K free, 0K shrd, 70728K > buff > Swap: 2097136K av, 35556K used, 2061580K free 690140K > cached > > > and the output of free: > > total used free shared buffers cached > Mem: 1027212 1016256 10956 0 71528 683956 > -/+ buffers/cache: 260772 766440 > Swap: 2097136 34692 2062444 > > > The problem is that swap usage can grow to 100Mb... yet the buffers and > cache remain at astoundingly high levels. > > I can actually see memory to cache and buffers increasing and at the same > time see it increasing swap usage! > > What I don't get is why the system... with about 700Mb in cache and 70Mb > in buffers, is using swap space at all. > > I've searched high and low on Google... using phrases like "linux kernel > proc cache", buffers, bdflush, etc. but I still can't explain this. > > Wouldn't it be far, FAR faster for the system to reduce the cache by about > 100Mb or so instead of swapping that 100Mb to disk? And note that the swap > usage is constantly fluctuating, so you can see the performance problem > this is causing. Any ideas?! > > Thanks in advance. > > Jas > -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]