Brooks Davis wrote: > On Wed, Feb 16, 2005 at 01:13:13PM -0800, Sean McNeil wrote: > >>On Wed, 2005-02-16 at 14:57 -0600, Eric Anderson wrote: >> >>>Brooks Davis wrote: >>> >>>>On Wed, Feb 16, 2005 at 12:12:10PM -0800, Sean McNeil wrote: >>>> >>>> >>>>>With a system built yesterday on my amd64, I had plenty of memory >>>>>showing as free when the system completely started up. Even after >>>>>intense usage I showed lots of free memory in top. Over night at some >>>>>point all my memory is no longer free but inactive. Is there anything >>>>>wrong here or is this expected behavior? ps doesn't show any serious >>>>>usage by any particular process. Also, if disk caches or something were >>>>>taking up the memory, I would expect it to have shown a lot earlier. >>>> >>>> >>>>On a system that has been up for any significant time, free memory >>>>should be very small since free memory is wasted. My guess is that it >>>>is disk cache and that one of the nightly jobs accessed enough stuff to >>>>fill it. >>> >>>Speaking of this - is there a way to flush the disk cache? [..snip..] > Sync writes dirty pages, it does not return pages to the free list. > There is no reason to agressivly return pages to the free list under > normal load, the system knows which pages have not been modified and > thus can be added to the free list at virtual no cost so why free pages > that might be used again. There's little cost in defering that and very > large potential savings if the data is accessed again later. One way > this can happen is if you mmap a file and read it, those pages will be > mapped and will remain mapped until something pushes them out. If they > are unmodifed, another process that has access to the same data can use > the cached copy rather then doing a read from disk. Thanks Brooks for the simple explanation! Makes total sense to me, and is pretty much what I had understood - I was mostly curious :) On that same topic - let's say someone has a 1TB file, and is using that with geom gate - would portions of that file still be cached as said above, or would they somehow be bypassing the potential caching abilities of the system? What about a geom gate connected directly to a device? Is those cases, would there be any benefit to having a large amount of memory available for caching? Eric -- ------------------------------------------------------------------------ Eric Anderson Sr. Systems Administrator Centaur Technology I have seen the future and it is just like the present, only longer. ------------------------------------------------------------------------Received on Wed Feb 16 2005 - 20:48:08 UTC
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