On Sun, 2006-05-14 at 07:45 -0400, Chuck Swiger wrote: > Andrew wrote: > > It's my understanding that if there is more than one instance of a > > specific application running, then portions of the code are shared in > > memory. I would assume that would apply to dynamically linked > > applications as well; i.e. if two different applications are linked > > against the same library, the given code exists in only one location in > > memory. Is this correct? > > Yes. The details are more complicated, but the portion of an executable > which contains code and does not change can be shared between many > processes from only one copy in physical RAM, and likewise for shared > libraries loaded by dynamic or runtime linking. > > > The second portion of my question is, how does this apply to jailed > > processes? Looking through the architecture handbook, I did not see any > > references to VM, which leads me to believe that the standard rules > > apply to jails as well. So, for instance, if I was to provide a hosting > > service with numerous instances of Apache running in individual jails, > > could I assume that base memory usage (ie idle, not serving requests) > > would increase at a roughly linear rate. > > > > The same thing applies to jails, and the static portions of apache/httpd > will only appear once in RAM, however, you are going to see roughly > linear increase in memory usage depending on the number of children > running, because there's anywhere from 1MB to 25MB or so of dynamic > memory being used per httpd which is specific to that process, depending > on which modules you're using and whether you are loading perl or PHP > scripts.... >
Hi Chuck, Thank you for the clarifications. It seems as though this will work quite well; the hosting setup, that is. I would have to assume that this has been done many times before, but it's always fun to have an idea pan out the way that you expected it to! -Andrew _______________________________________________ [email protected] mailing list http://lists.freebsd.org/mailman/listinfo/freebsd-questions To unsubscribe, send any mail to "[EMAIL PROTECTED]"
