* overcommit stuff
@ 2002-09-21 23:27 Andrew Morton
2002-09-21 23:28 ` William Lee Irwin III
` (2 more replies)
0 siblings, 3 replies; 15+ messages in thread
From: Andrew Morton @ 2002-09-21 23:27 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: Alan Cox; +Cc: linux-mm
Alan,
running 10,000 tiobench threads I'm showing 23 gigs of
`Commited_AS'. Is this right? Those pages are shared,
and if they're not PROT_WRITEable then there's no way in
which they can become unshared? Seems to be excessively
pessimistic?
Or is 2.5 not up to date?
Thanks.
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^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 15+ messages in thread* Re: overcommit stuff 2002-09-21 23:27 overcommit stuff Andrew Morton @ 2002-09-21 23:28 ` William Lee Irwin III 2002-09-21 23:31 ` Martin J. Bligh 2002-09-21 23:46 ` Hugh Dickins 2 siblings, 0 replies; 15+ messages in thread From: William Lee Irwin III @ 2002-09-21 23:28 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Andrew Morton; +Cc: Alan Cox, linux-mm On Sat, Sep 21, 2002 at 04:27:02PM -0700, Andrew Morton wrote: > Alan, > running 10,000 tiobench threads I'm showing 23 gigs of > `Commited_AS'. Is this right? Those pages are shared, > and if they're not PROT_WRITEable then there's no way in > which they can become unshared? Seems to be excessively > pessimistic? > Or is 2.5 not up to date? > Thanks. Hmm, that sounds different from what I see, I usually see between 75GB and 250GB of Committed_AS. OTOH that does seem "over the top", esp. since the ZONE_NORMAL OOM's usually hit with between 18GB and 30GB of ZONE_HIGHMEM totally untouched. Cheers, Bill -- To unsubscribe, send a message with 'unsubscribe linux-mm' in the body to majordomo@kvack.org. For more info on Linux MM, see: http://www.linux-mm.org/ ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 15+ messages in thread
* Re: overcommit stuff 2002-09-21 23:27 overcommit stuff Andrew Morton 2002-09-21 23:28 ` William Lee Irwin III @ 2002-09-21 23:31 ` Martin J. Bligh 2002-09-22 0:03 ` Andrew Morton 2002-09-21 23:46 ` Hugh Dickins 2 siblings, 1 reply; 15+ messages in thread From: Martin J. Bligh @ 2002-09-21 23:31 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Andrew Morton, Alan Cox; +Cc: linux-mm > running 10,000 tiobench threads I'm showing 23 gigs of > `Commited_AS'. Is this right? Those pages are shared, > and if they're not PROT_WRITEable then there's no way in > which they can become unshared? Seems to be excessively > pessimistic? > > Or is 2.5 not up to date? It's also a global atomic counter that burns up a fair amount of CPU time bouncing cachelines on the NUMA boxes ... even when overcommit is set to 1, and it's not used for anything other than meminfo ... any chance of this either becoming a per-cpu thing, or dying, or not being used when overcommit is 1? M. -- To unsubscribe, send a message with 'unsubscribe linux-mm' in the body to majordomo@kvack.org. For more info on Linux MM, see: http://www.linux-mm.org/ ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 15+ messages in thread
* Re: overcommit stuff 2002-09-21 23:31 ` Martin J. Bligh @ 2002-09-22 0:03 ` Andrew Morton 2002-09-22 0:08 ` Martin J. Bligh 0 siblings, 1 reply; 15+ messages in thread From: Andrew Morton @ 2002-09-22 0:03 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Martin J. Bligh; +Cc: Alan Cox, linux-mm "Martin J. Bligh" wrote: > > > running 10,000 tiobench threads I'm showing 23 gigs of > > `Commited_AS'. Is this right? Those pages are shared, > > and if they're not PROT_WRITEable then there's no way in > > which they can become unshared? Seems to be excessively > > pessimistic? > > > > Or is 2.5 not up to date? > > It's also a global atomic counter that burns up a fair amount > of CPU time bouncing cachelines on the NUMA boxes ... even when > overcommit is set to 1, and it's not used for anything other > than meminfo ... any chance of this either becoming a per-cpu > thing, or dying, or not being used when overcommit is 1? "It" being vm_committed_space. The problem is that it's read from frequently, as well as updated frequently. So we would still have problems when we have to reach across and fish the cpu-local counters out of remote corners of the machine all the time. The usual tricks for amortising this counter's cost have (serious) accuracy implications. I am planning on sitting down and working out exactly what we're trying to account here - presumably there's another way. Just havent got onto it yet. Worst come to worst, we can hide it inside CONFIG_NOT_WHACKOMATIC I guess. -- To unsubscribe, send a message with 'unsubscribe linux-mm' in the body to majordomo@kvack.org. For more info on Linux MM, see: http://www.linux-mm.org/ ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 15+ messages in thread
* Re: overcommit stuff 2002-09-22 0:03 ` Andrew Morton @ 2002-09-22 0:08 ` Martin J. Bligh 2002-09-22 1:04 ` Hugh Dickins 0 siblings, 1 reply; 15+ messages in thread From: Martin J. Bligh @ 2002-09-22 0:08 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Andrew Morton; +Cc: Alan Cox, linux-mm > "It" being vm_committed_space. > > The problem is that it's read from frequently, as well as > updated frequently. So we would still have problems when > we have to reach across and fish the cpu-local counters > out of remote corners of the machine all the time. Not if you set overcommit = 1, as far as I can see. > The usual tricks for amortising this counter's cost have (serious) > accuracy implications. Well, seems it's a rough guess anyway ... at least it's vastly inaccurate in one direction (pessimistic). > I am planning on sitting down and working out exactly what we're > trying to account here - presumably there's another way. Just > havent got onto it yet. > > Worst come to worst, we can hide it inside CONFIG_NOT_WHACKOMATIC > I guess. I was thinking of moving the update in vm_enough_memory under the switch for what type of overcommit you had, and doing something similar for the other places it's updated. I suppose that would do unfortunate things if you turned overcommit from 1 to something else whilst the system was running though ... not convinced that's a good idea anyway OTOH. M. -- To unsubscribe, send a message with 'unsubscribe linux-mm' in the body to majordomo@kvack.org. For more info on Linux MM, see: http://www.linux-mm.org/ ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 15+ messages in thread
* Re: overcommit stuff 2002-09-22 0:08 ` Martin J. Bligh @ 2002-09-22 1:04 ` Hugh Dickins 2002-09-22 1:07 ` Martin J. Bligh 0 siblings, 1 reply; 15+ messages in thread From: Hugh Dickins @ 2002-09-22 1:04 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Martin J. Bligh; +Cc: Andrew Morton, Alan Cox, linux-mm On Sat, 21 Sep 2002, Martin J. Bligh wrote: > > > The usual tricks for amortising this counter's cost have (serious) > > accuracy implications. > > Well, seems it's a rough guess anyway ... at least it's vastly > inaccurate in one direction (pessimistic). Yesss. I don't think it matters much if it's somewhat inaccurate (the half-of-memory thing is just pulled out of a hat anyway, isn't it? and there's no accounting for taste^Hthe kernel's memory usage, just a hope that it won't go over half). But it would be very wrong to introduce any indeterminacy in the calculations, such that the numbers might progressively drift further and further away from what's right. That's one of the reasons it ends up so pessimistic, because it would be impossible (or too costly) to do the accounting otherwise. > I was thinking of moving the update in vm_enough_memory under > the switch for what type of overcommit you had, and doing something > similar for the other places it's updated. I suppose that would do > unfortunate things if you turned overcommit from 1 to something > else whilst the system was running though ... not convinced that's > a good idea anyway OTOH. It is intended that you should be able to switch commit modes while running. There is one hole there that we've not got around to plugging yet, the handling of MAP_NORESERVE, but otherwise I believe it makes sense: please don't take that away. I like to see those Committed_AS numbers (though I don't care for the "_AS" prefix), even though I run loose. Hugh -- To unsubscribe, send a message with 'unsubscribe linux-mm' in the body to majordomo@kvack.org. For more info on Linux MM, see: http://www.linux-mm.org/ ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 15+ messages in thread
* Re: overcommit stuff 2002-09-22 1:04 ` Hugh Dickins @ 2002-09-22 1:07 ` Martin J. Bligh 0 siblings, 0 replies; 15+ messages in thread From: Martin J. Bligh @ 2002-09-22 1:07 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Hugh Dickins; +Cc: Andrew Morton, Alan Cox, linux-mm > It is intended that you should be able to switch commit modes while > running. There is one hole there that we've not got around to > plugging yet, the handling of MAP_NORESERVE, but otherwise I believe > it makes sense: please don't take that away. Not quite sure why you'd want to do that, but if you really do, I guess making a config option to disable this stuff is a possibility. > I like to see those Committed_AS numbers (though I don't care for > the "_AS" prefix), even though I run loose. Well, there are cheaper ways of keeping it if it's just a stat for meminfo ;-) M. -- To unsubscribe, send a message with 'unsubscribe linux-mm' in the body to majordomo@kvack.org. For more info on Linux MM, see: http://www.linux-mm.org/ ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 15+ messages in thread
* Re: overcommit stuff 2002-09-21 23:27 overcommit stuff Andrew Morton 2002-09-21 23:28 ` William Lee Irwin III 2002-09-21 23:31 ` Martin J. Bligh @ 2002-09-21 23:46 ` Hugh Dickins 2002-09-21 23:53 ` Andrew Morton 2002-09-21 23:53 ` William Lee Irwin III 2 siblings, 2 replies; 15+ messages in thread From: Hugh Dickins @ 2002-09-21 23:46 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Andrew Morton; +Cc: Alan Cox, linux-mm On Sat, 21 Sep 2002, Andrew Morton wrote: > Alan, > > running 10,000 tiobench threads I'm showing 23 gigs of > `Commited_AS'. Is this right? Those pages are shared, > and if they're not PROT_WRITEable then there's no way in > which they can become unshared? Seems to be excessively > pessimistic? > > Or is 2.5 not up to date? I don't think Alan can be held responsible for errors in the overcommit stuff rml ported to 2.5 and I then added fixes to. I believe it is up to date in 2.5. Committed_AS certainly errs on the pessimistic side, that's what it's about. How much swap do you have i.e. is 23GB committed impossible, or just surprising to you? Does the number go back to what it started off from when you kill off the tests? How are "those pages" allocated e.g. what mmap args? Hugh -- To unsubscribe, send a message with 'unsubscribe linux-mm' in the body to majordomo@kvack.org. For more info on Linux MM, see: http://www.linux-mm.org/ ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 15+ messages in thread
* Re: overcommit stuff 2002-09-21 23:46 ` Hugh Dickins @ 2002-09-21 23:53 ` Andrew Morton 2002-09-22 0:49 ` Hugh Dickins 2002-09-21 23:53 ` William Lee Irwin III 1 sibling, 1 reply; 15+ messages in thread From: Andrew Morton @ 2002-09-21 23:53 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Hugh Dickins; +Cc: Alan Cox, linux-mm Hugh Dickins wrote: > > On Sat, 21 Sep 2002, Andrew Morton wrote: > > Alan, > > > > running 10,000 tiobench threads I'm showing 23 gigs of > > `Commited_AS'. Is this right? Those pages are shared, > > and if they're not PROT_WRITEable then there's no way in > > which they can become unshared? Seems to be excessively > > pessimistic? > > > > Or is 2.5 not up to date? > > I don't think Alan can be held responsible for errors in the > overcommit stuff rml ported to 2.5 and I then added fixes to. Well I'm not saying it's an error. It may be by design. > I believe it is up to date in 2.5. OK. > Committed_AS certainly errs on the pessimistic side, that's > what it's about. How much swap do you have i.e. is 23GB > committed impossible, or just surprising to you? Does the > number go back to what it started off from when you kill > off the tests? How are "those pages" allocated e.g. what > mmap args? I have 7G physical, 4G swap. "those pages" were just used by some scruffy perl script running `./tiotest &' ten thousand times. I assume it's shared executable text. It seems very unlikely (impossible?) that those pages will ever become unshared. Are they returned when the threads are killed? Dunno - the machine got a vists from the NMI watchdog in the scheduler somewhere before I could tell. Retesting... Here's what I had when it died: MemTotal: 7249608 kB MemFree: 7180 kB MemShared: 0 kB Buffers: 29040 kB Cached: 6879180 kB SwapCached: 51216 kB Active: 22672 kB Inactive: 6950548 kB HighTotal: 6422528 kB HighFree: 2980 kB LowTotal: 827080 kB LowFree: 4200 kB SwapTotal: 3951844 kB SwapFree: 3829764 kB Dirty: 658468 kB Writeback: 10640 kB Mapped: 57228 kB Slab: 83188 kB Committed_AS: 28417140 kB PageTables: 58152 kB ReverseMaps: 28455 nr_dirty 165433 nr_writeback 2663 nr_pagecache 1739859 nr_page_table_pages 14538 nr_reverse_maps 28455 nr_mapped 14307 nr_slab 20802 pswpin 45 pswpout 30532 pgalloc 6671454 pgfree 6673245 pgactivate 74265 pgdeactivate 68457 pgfault 1261681 pgmajfault 714 pgscan 4640872 pgrefill 100136 pgsteal 4329474 kswapd_steal 1413013 pageoutrun 90269 allocstall 90269 buffer_head: 25669KB 30953KB 82.92 task_struct: 14648KB 15218KB 96.25 radix_tree_node: 12337KB 12354KB 99.85 ext2_inode_cache: 4058KB 4058KB 100.0 vm_area_struct: 2463KB 2475KB 99.52 size-512: 1428KB 1428KB 100.0 filp: 1301KB 1301KB 100.0 dentry_cache: 1290KB 1290KB 100.0 biovec-BIO_MAX_PAGES: 780KB 780KB 100.0 names_cache: 744KB 748KB 99.46 biovec-64: 677KB 723KB 93.57 blkdev_requests: 625KB 633KB 98.69 size-4096: 556KB 556KB 100.0 pte_chain: 158KB 489KB 32.39 sgpool-MAX_PHYS_SEGMENTS: 420KB 480KB 87.50 biovec-128: 390KB 390KB 100.0 size-2048: 352KB 352KB 100.0 size-1024: 348KB 348KB 100.0 size-32: 317KB 324KB 97.57 ext3_inode_cache: 171KB 240KB 71.22 sgpool-64: 213KB 232KB 91.93 signal_act: 212KB 212KB 100.0 -- To unsubscribe, send a message with 'unsubscribe linux-mm' in the body to majordomo@kvack.org. For more info on Linux MM, see: http://www.linux-mm.org/ ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 15+ messages in thread
* Re: overcommit stuff 2002-09-21 23:53 ` Andrew Morton @ 2002-09-22 0:49 ` Hugh Dickins 2002-09-22 1:07 ` Andrew Morton 0 siblings, 1 reply; 15+ messages in thread From: Hugh Dickins @ 2002-09-22 0:49 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Andrew Morton; +Cc: Alan Cox, linux-mm On Sat, 21 Sep 2002, Andrew Morton wrote: > Hugh Dickins wrote: > > On Sat, 21 Sep 2002, Andrew Morton wrote: > > > > > > running 10,000 tiobench threads I'm showing 23 gigs of > > > `Commited_AS'. Is this right? Those pages are shared, > > > and if they're not PROT_WRITEable then there's no way in > > > which they can become unshared? Seems to be excessively > > > pessimistic? > > > Committed_AS certainly errs on the pessimistic side, that's > > what it's about. How much swap do you have i.e. is 23GB > > committed impossible, or just surprising to you? Does the > > number go back to what it started off from when you kill > > off the tests? How are "those pages" allocated e.g. what > > mmap args? > > I have 7G physical, 4G swap. When I wondered if impossible, of course I was overlooking that you wouldn't be running with strict commit limitation, so "impossible" is quite difficult to reach. > "those pages" were just used by some scruffy perl script > running `./tiotest &' ten thousand times. I assume it's > shared executable text. When I run tiotest here, /proc/<pid>/maps shows a little over 2MB of rwxp or rw-p areas, all to be counted in Committed_AS. So 23GB for 10,000 of them sounds reasonable. You think you have less PROT_WRITE or less MAP_PRIVATE than I'm seeing? > It seems very unlikely (impossible?) that those pages will > ever become unshared. I expect it's very unlikely (short of application bugs) that those pages would become unshared; but they have been mapped in such a way that the process is entitled to unshare them, therefore they have been counted. A good example of why Linux does not impose strict commit accounting, and why you may choose not to use Alan's strict accounting policy. Hugh -- To unsubscribe, send a message with 'unsubscribe linux-mm' in the body to majordomo@kvack.org. For more info on Linux MM, see: http://www.linux-mm.org/ ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 15+ messages in thread
* Re: overcommit stuff 2002-09-22 0:49 ` Hugh Dickins @ 2002-09-22 1:07 ` Andrew Morton 2002-09-22 1:45 ` Hugh Dickins 0 siblings, 1 reply; 15+ messages in thread From: Andrew Morton @ 2002-09-22 1:07 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Hugh Dickins; +Cc: Alan Cox, linux-mm Hugh Dickins wrote: > > ... > > It seems very unlikely (impossible?) that those pages will > > ever become unshared. > > I expect it's very unlikely (short of application bugs) that > those pages would become unshared; but they have been mapped > in such a way that the process is entitled to unshare them, > therefore they have been counted. A good example of why > Linux does not impose strict commit accounting, and why > you may choose not to use Alan's strict accounting policy. > OK, thanks. Just checking. Is glibc mapping executables with PROT_WRITE? If so, doesn't that rather devalue the whole overcommit thing? -- To unsubscribe, send a message with 'unsubscribe linux-mm' in the body to majordomo@kvack.org. For more info on Linux MM, see: http://www.linux-mm.org/ ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 15+ messages in thread
* Re: overcommit stuff 2002-09-22 1:07 ` Andrew Morton @ 2002-09-22 1:45 ` Hugh Dickins 2002-09-22 1:49 ` Andrew Morton 0 siblings, 1 reply; 15+ messages in thread From: Hugh Dickins @ 2002-09-22 1:45 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Andrew Morton; +Cc: Alan Cox, linux-mm On Sat, 21 Sep 2002, Andrew Morton wrote: > Hugh Dickins wrote: > > ... > > > It seems very unlikely (impossible?) that those pages will > > > ever become unshared. > > > > I expect it's very unlikely (short of application bugs) that > > those pages would become unshared; but they have been mapped > > in such a way that the process is entitled to unshare them, > > therefore they have been counted. A good example of why > > Linux does not impose strict commit accounting, and why > > you may choose not to use Alan's strict accounting policy. > > OK, thanks. Just checking. > > Is glibc mapping executables with PROT_WRITE? If so, > doesn't that rather devalue the whole overcommit thing? No, it looks like glibc is doing the right thing (mapping the code readonly and the data+bss readwrite). And I was wrong to say it's unlikely those pages would ever become unshared: the four 0.5MB areas look like typical readwrite private anon allocations. Hugh -- To unsubscribe, send a message with 'unsubscribe linux-mm' in the body to majordomo@kvack.org. For more info on Linux MM, see: http://www.linux-mm.org/ ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 15+ messages in thread
* Re: overcommit stuff 2002-09-22 1:45 ` Hugh Dickins @ 2002-09-22 1:49 ` Andrew Morton 0 siblings, 0 replies; 15+ messages in thread From: Andrew Morton @ 2002-09-22 1:49 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Hugh Dickins; +Cc: Alan Cox, linux-mm Hugh Dickins wrote: > > On Sat, 21 Sep 2002, Andrew Morton wrote: > > Hugh Dickins wrote: > > > ... > > > > It seems very unlikely (impossible?) that those pages will > > > > ever become unshared. > > > > > > I expect it's very unlikely (short of application bugs) that > > > those pages would become unshared; but they have been mapped > > > in such a way that the process is entitled to unshare them, > > > therefore they have been counted. A good example of why > > > Linux does not impose strict commit accounting, and why > > > you may choose not to use Alan's strict accounting policy. > > > > OK, thanks. Just checking. > > > > Is glibc mapping executables with PROT_WRITE? If so, > > doesn't that rather devalue the whole overcommit thing? > > No, it looks like glibc is doing the right thing (mapping the code > readonly and the data+bss readwrite). And I was wrong to say it's > unlikely those pages would ever become unshared: the four 0.5MB > areas look like typical readwrite private anon allocations. > hm. That would be two megs of real memory per task? So maybe I wasn't running 10000 tasks. It's hard to say - running ps with that many processes in the machine appears to take longer than I have left on this earth. Maybe an `ls /proc | wc' would tell me. Dunno; I've moved onto other bugs for today. Bill seems to be into this stuff. Hopefully he'll retest on the next -mm, which should be a bit nicer to those-who-run-too-many-tiobenches. -- To unsubscribe, send a message with 'unsubscribe linux-mm' in the body to majordomo@kvack.org. For more info on Linux MM, see: http://www.linux-mm.org/ ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 15+ messages in thread
* Re: overcommit stuff 2002-09-21 23:46 ` Hugh Dickins 2002-09-21 23:53 ` Andrew Morton @ 2002-09-21 23:53 ` William Lee Irwin III 2002-09-22 1:12 ` Andrew Morton 1 sibling, 1 reply; 15+ messages in thread From: William Lee Irwin III @ 2002-09-21 23:53 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Hugh Dickins; +Cc: Andrew Morton, Alan Cox, linux-mm On Sun, Sep 22, 2002 at 12:46:59AM +0100, Hugh Dickins wrote: > I don't think Alan can be held responsible for errors in the > overcommit stuff rml ported to 2.5 and I then added fixes to. > I believe it is up to date in 2.5. > Committed_AS certainly errs on the pessimistic side, that's > what it's about. How much swap do you have i.e. is 23GB > committed impossible, or just surprising to you? Does the > number go back to what it started off from when you kill > off the tests? How are "those pages" allocated e.g. what > mmap args? > Hugh In my case it's not really possible to rerun a test in the same boot. It's not really survived very often, and when it has, it generally fails to start a second time. Various other things feel the OOM sting then, e.g. kernel compiles, small task count dbench, etc. Some of this might be slab, but I think there might be a leak. The best answers I've come up with thus far are "Hrm, the OOM killer gets set off at the wrong times, and maybe delalloc would kill bh's?" Cheers, Bill -- To unsubscribe, send a message with 'unsubscribe linux-mm' in the body to majordomo@kvack.org. For more info on Linux MM, see: http://www.linux-mm.org/ ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 15+ messages in thread
* Re: overcommit stuff 2002-09-21 23:53 ` William Lee Irwin III @ 2002-09-22 1:12 ` Andrew Morton 0 siblings, 0 replies; 15+ messages in thread From: Andrew Morton @ 2002-09-22 1:12 UTC (permalink / raw) To: William Lee Irwin III; +Cc: Hugh Dickins, Alan Cox, linux-mm William Lee Irwin III wrote: > > On Sun, Sep 22, 2002 at 12:46:59AM +0100, Hugh Dickins wrote: > > I don't think Alan can be held responsible for errors in the > > overcommit stuff rml ported to 2.5 and I then added fixes to. > > I believe it is up to date in 2.5. > > Committed_AS certainly errs on the pessimistic side, that's > > what it's about. How much swap do you have i.e. is 23GB > > committed impossible, or just surprising to you? Does the > > number go back to what it started off from when you kill > > off the tests? How are "those pages" allocated e.g. what > > mmap args? > > Hugh > > In my case it's not really possible to rerun a test in the same > boot. It's not really survived very often, and when it has, it > generally fails to start a second time. Various other things feel the > OOM sting then, e.g. kernel compiles, small task count dbench, etc. > > Some of this might be slab, but I think there might be a leak. > The best answers I've come up with thus far are "Hrm, the OOM killer > gets set off at the wrong times, and maybe delalloc would kill bh's?" > I see no leak. After a 30-40 minute run I managed to wrestle all the threads to the ground, unmounted the target fs and ended up with total used free shared buffers cached Mem: 7249612 62796 7186816 0 11016 10804 -/+ buffers/cache: 40976 7208636 Swap: 3951844 80 3951764 -- To unsubscribe, send a message with 'unsubscribe linux-mm' in the body to majordomo@kvack.org. For more info on Linux MM, see: http://www.linux-mm.org/ ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 15+ messages in thread
end of thread, other threads:[~2002-09-22 1:49 UTC | newest] Thread overview: 15+ messages (download: mbox.gz / follow: Atom feed) -- links below jump to the message on this page -- 2002-09-21 23:27 overcommit stuff Andrew Morton 2002-09-21 23:28 ` William Lee Irwin III 2002-09-21 23:31 ` Martin J. Bligh 2002-09-22 0:03 ` Andrew Morton 2002-09-22 0:08 ` Martin J. Bligh 2002-09-22 1:04 ` Hugh Dickins 2002-09-22 1:07 ` Martin J. Bligh 2002-09-21 23:46 ` Hugh Dickins 2002-09-21 23:53 ` Andrew Morton 2002-09-22 0:49 ` Hugh Dickins 2002-09-22 1:07 ` Andrew Morton 2002-09-22 1:45 ` Hugh Dickins 2002-09-22 1:49 ` Andrew Morton 2002-09-21 23:53 ` William Lee Irwin III 2002-09-22 1:12 ` Andrew Morton
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