Hi all,
we have upgraded a bunch of servers from Wheezy to Buster and experiencing a
excessive usage of Swap after the upgrades on all systems.
We have done some testing on this:
Swap usage with stock Buster Linux 4.19: highSwap usage with Buster backports
Linux 5.3: highSwap usage with self
no doodle installed
- Original Message -
From:
kamaraju kusumanchi
To: debian-user
Sent: Wednesday, June 08, 2005 6:27
PM
Subject: Re: Swap usage
theal wrote:> It grows to almost a gig. I have a
program I suspect is the problem, > but it would be nice to b
theal wrote:
It grows to almost a gig. I have a program I suspect is the problem,
but it would be nice to be able to verify without restart this very
mission critical program.
Tony
Do you have doodle or doodled installed on your system? I found that it
eats up all the memory and consume
No I have 100 servers running this program and most
only use about 200 - 300 MB of swap total.
Tony
- Original Message -
From:
Michael Z
Daryabeygi
To: debian-user@lists.debian.org
Sent: Wednesday, June 08, 2005 5:58
PM
Subject: Re: Swap usage
theal wrote
*From:* Steve Lamb <mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
*To:* debian-user@lists.debian.org
<mailto:debian-user@lists.debian.org>
*Sent:* Wednesday, June 08, 2005 5:30 PM
*Subject:* Re: Swap usage
No virus found
, 2005 5:30
PM
Subject: Re: Swap usage
theal wrote:
> But that will not tell me what is using swap only what is using a
> resource. I need to determine what program or PID is actually causing my
> swap to grow. I already know that it is growing, just don't know what is
> causing it.
Uhm, is it growing uncontrolably or just growing
Wolfe
To: theal
Cc: debian-user@lists.debian.org
Sent: Wednesday, June 08, 2005 5:14
PM
Subject: Re: Swap usage
On Wed, 8 Jun 2005, theal wrote:> Does anyone know
how to tell what program or PID is causing swap usage? I have a system with 2
GB RAM so it should using little or
On Wed, 8 Jun 2005, theal wrote:
Does anyone know how to tell what program or PID is causing swap usage? I have
a system with 2 GB RAM so it should using little or no swap, but at times it
does and I need to determine what the cause is.
Tony
Log in as root or do an 'su' and at
Does anyone know how to tell what program or PID is
causing swap usage? I have a system with 2 GB RAM so it should using little or
no swap, but at times it does and I need to determine what the cause
is.
Tony
On 04 Sep 2002 08:49:05 +0200
Adrian 'Dagurashibanipal' von Bidder <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> I don't know much about how swap management is handled, but it's pretty
> much global on a per page basis. You can influence the memory system by
> digging around (and chaning things) in /proc/sys/vm,
On Tue, 2002-09-03 at 17:33, Jamin W.Collins wrote:
> I have a few large applications that tend to lay dormant from time to
> time, and as a result Linux memory management shuffles them off to swap.
> For these applications this can mean very sluggish performance when I come
> back to them (after
I have a few large applications that tend to lay dormant from time to
time, and as a result Linux memory management shuffles them off to swap.
For these applications this can mean very sluggish performance when I come
back to them (after a day or two). Is there any way, short of lowering
the amo
* Mike Pfleger ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) spake thusly:
> Hello, all.
>
> I was building a web-browsable directory of constructivist and post-
> constructivist art, and when I was done mucking about, I noticed that
> gkrellm was reporting that swap was about 40% used. To my dismay,
> closing the GIMP an
. To my dismay,
> closing the GIMP and Netscape did not free any swap. Can I assume that
Once memory is moved into swap space, it will stay there until it's
called for. Therefore removing those programs won't necissarily cause
an immediate decline in swap usage. Perhaps most of that swap sp
Hello, all.
I was building a web-browsable directory of constructivist and post-
constructivist art, and when I was done mucking about, I noticed that
gkrellm was reporting that swap was about 40% used. To my dismay,
closing the GIMP and Netscape did not free any swap. Can I assume that
NS had c
the problem
Chris> persists. Perhaps I should take this up with the linux-kernel
Chris> list?
I'm on 2.4.9 for the moment. Swap usage seems relatively normal, but I
haven't had time to investigate the situation thouroughly. (This
kernel seems to have a few other weird things.)
On Mon, Aug 13, 2001 at 10:52:18PM +0200, Guy Geens wrote:
> Kernels before 2.4.7 had a bug in the swap code, leading to the
> behaviour you described. 2.4.7 is better, but apparently it doesn't
> fix things completely.
>
> Try upgrading to 2.4.8.
Thanks for the info and your suggestion, but it d
Can someone tell me if this is normal behavior? Note how the amount of
physical memory in use doesn't change even though 52 megs of data from swap
must be swapped in. Is the swapped data tossed? If its useless, why hadn't
it been cleared out beforehand? Any information would be helpful. Please
7;ll try not to exaggerate) reading I-know-not-what
back into memory. As I type, top(1) shows XF86_S3 using 5752K of
RSS, and *192M* (!!!) of swap usage. (Okay, maybe
I-DO-know-what. ;) Why why why? Does XFree86 3.3.5 have a
memory leak, perhaps? It certainly never did this before I
upgraded to
In an attempt to save the world from disaster, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> Hi all,
>
> How can I find out which programs are using swap and how much of it?
ps -am
should be what you want. Or maybe "ps -axmw", what I often use.
--
joost witteveen, [EMAIL PROTECTED]
The upstream maintai
Hi all,
How can I find out which programs are using swap and how much of it?
As an example, I have found that netscape4 will occasionally start using
lots of swap and will not release it until closed, even if it is not
using it anymore(say after loading a large page like Packages.gz or
something).
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