On Tue 03 May 2011 at 05:20:52 -0700, Jeremy Chadwick wrote: > To be on the safe side, pick something that's small at first, then work > your way up. You'll need probably 1+ weeks of heavy ZFS I/O between > tests (e.g. don't change the tunable, reboot, then 4 hours later declare > the new (larger) value as stable).
Ah, that's important: so far it seemed to me that a *too small* value (for all various tunables) would cause problems, but now you're saying that *too large* is the problem (at least for vfs.zfs.arc_max)! This machine has mixed loads; from time to time somebody starts a big job with lots of I/O, and in between it is much more modestly loaded. > So for example on an 8GB RAM machine, I might recommend starting with > vfs.zfs.arc_max="4096M" and let that run for a while. If you find your > "Wired" value in top(1) remains fairly constant after a week or so of > heavy I/O, consider bumping up the value a bit more (say 4608M). I'll do just that. > Sorry to make this long-winded; bad habit of mine that I've never > managed to break. Oh no problem, it turns out to be eye-opening! > | Jeremy Chadwick j...@parodius.com | -Olaf. -- Pipe rene = new PipePicture(); assert(Not rene.GetType().Equals(Pipe)); _______________________________________________ freebsd-stable@freebsd.org mailing list http://lists.freebsd.org/mailman/listinfo/freebsd-stable To unsubscribe, send any mail to "freebsd-stable-unsubscr...@freebsd.org"