Iasen Kostov <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > On Thu, 2006-05-25 at 16:54 -0400, Kris Kennaway wrote: > > On Thu, May 25, 2006 at 06:01:30PM +0200, Arno J. Klaassen wrote:
> > > I get a very easy to reproduce panic on 6.1-STABLE : > > > > > > /etc/periodic/weekly/310.locate panics with > > > > > > panic: kmem_malloc(4096): kmem_map too small: 335544320 total > > > allocated > > > > It looks like you are using a malloc-backed md and you do not have > > enough RAM to handle the size. Perhaps tmpmfs does not use swap > > backing, as it is supposed to? > First of all if there is not enough kmem (not just plain ram > I think) kernel should not allow disk creation in first place, second > - I think (although there could be some ... reason for that) it's > stupid way to say "I don't have more kmem" by panicing :). Better way > will be just to fail disk operation of that FS with "Disk is full" or > something like that. At home I tried to raise kmem like that: > "vm.kmem_size_max="1073741824" (I got 2G of RAM) > (setting vm.kmem_size directly panices kernel at boot if I remember > correctly). > > but for my surprise kernel panices at exact same allocated md disk > space with the same panic as the original poster's. Is it possible > that I should rise KVA_PAGES too ? And I don't think its documented > anywhere (of course I've tried googling and it's always possible that > I've missed something :). All this was on FreeBSD 6.0. man mdconfig mentions the problem: malloc Storage for this type of memory disk is allocated with malloc(9). This limits the size to the malloc bucket limit in the kernel. If the -o reserve option is not set, creating and filling a large malloc-backed memory disk is a very easy way to panic a system. Use a swap backed disk and the problem will disappear. Fabian -- http://www.fabiankeil.de/
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