On Tuesday 27 February 2007 11:41, Alex Kozlov wrote: = On Tue, Feb 27, 2007 at 10:59:08AM -0500, Mikhail Teterin wrote: = > /tmp's space allocation (after reboot) is as follows: = > = > Filesystem 1K-blocks Used Avail Capacity Mounted on = > /dev/md0 2026030 3552 1860396 0% /tmp = > = > Note, that it is supposed to hold 2Gb, but was filled up and paniced = > holding about 300Mb... Probably, because it is created with ``-M'' = > by default -- but it is not supposed to panic anyway! = You may want to set -o reserve option. Or better, switch to a swap backed = md.
Yes, I switched to swap-backed md already. But the malloc-based variety is currently the _default_ (see /etc/defaults/rc.conf)... Creation of a 2Gb malloc-based md should've failed on a machine with 768Mb of RAM, shouldn't it have? On Tuesday 27 February 2007 11:45, Zaphod Beeblebrox wrote: = IIRC, the total kernel memory on a normally configured 6.xor 7.x box is 1G = on 32 bit. = So I've pretty much abandoned ram disks on 32 bit machines. Not enough = memory. Memory "disks" used to be served by user-space processes (mount_mfs), making them not care for the whole malloc/swap distinctions, and the address-space concerns. Are you sure, swap-based mds still consume kernel's address space, though? -mi _______________________________________________ freebsd-stable@freebsd.org mailing list http://lists.freebsd.org/mailman/listinfo/freebsd-stable To unsubscribe, send any mail to "[EMAIL PROTECTED]"