Hi,
Here the output of memory real and swap values for a Mac OSX client:
Tue Apr 18 08:34:07 CEST 2006 - Memory OK
Memory Used Total Percentage
green Physical 420M 1024M 41% green Swap 4294967295M 4294967295M 0%
What means this hudge value for swap?
----Extract of client data---- [meminfo] Mach Virtual Memory Statistics: (page size of 4096 bytes) Pages free: 154609. Pages active: 45696. Pages inactive: 34172. Pages wired down: 27667. "Translation faults": 702133041. Pages copy-on-write: 110185692. Pages zero filled: 148901972. Pages reactivated: 26786. Pageins: 3864958. Pageouts: 27880. Object cache: 18823165 hits of 23019598 lookups (81% hit rate)
Dominique
Hi Enrik,
have you seen my message on nwstats2bb graph?
i have try to send you my data about my novell server
regards,
Marco
On Tue, Apr 18, 2006 at 08:38:04AM +0200, Dominique Frise wrote:
Here the output of memory real and swap values for a Mac OSX client:
Tue Apr 18 08:34:07 CEST 2006 - Memory OK
Memory Used Total Percentage green Physical 420M 1024M 41% green Swap 4294967295M 4294967295M 0%
What means this hudge value for swap?
It's a bug. There is no swap information in the Darwin vm_stat output, so it shouldn't be reporting those at all.
Henrik
Henrik Stoerner wrote:
On Tue, Apr 18, 2006 at 08:38:04AM +0200, Dominique Frise wrote:
Here the output of memory real and swap values for a Mac OSX client:
Tue Apr 18 08:34:07 CEST 2006 - Memory OK
Memory Used Total Percentage green Physical 420M 1024M 41% green Swap 4294967295M 4294967295M 0%
What means this hudge value for swap?
It's a bug. There is no swap information in the Darwin vm_stat output, so it shouldn't be reporting those at all.
Henrik
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There is
-- Meilleures salutations,
Dominique __________________UNIL - University of Lausanne__________________ Dominique Frise E-mail: Dominique.Frise at unil.ch UNIL, Centre Informatique Phone: +41 21 692 22 21 Quartier Sorge / Amphimax Fax: +41 21 692 22 05 CH-1015 Lausanne, Switzerland URL: http://www.unil.ch/ci
On Tue, Apr 18, 2006 at 10:13:10AM +0200, Dominique Frise wrote:
Henrik Stoerner wrote:
It's a bug. There is no swap information in the Darwin vm_stat output, so it shouldn't be reporting those at all.
There is
Clue me in. Which bit of this info is about swap ?
[meminfo] Mach Virtual Memory Statistics: (page size of 4096 bytes) Pages free: 154609. Pages active: 45696. Pages inactive: 34172. Pages wired down: 27667. "Translation faults": 702133041. Pages copy-on-write: 110185692. Pages zero filled: 148901972. Pages reactivated: 26786. Pageins: 3864958. Pageouts: 27880. Object cache: 18823165 hits of 23019598 lookups (81% hit rate)
I can understand the Pageins/Pageouts. But that sounds like swap activity, not how much swap is used.
Henrik
Henrik Stoerner wrote:
On Tue, Apr 18, 2006 at 10:13:10AM +0200, Dominique Frise wrote:
Henrik Stoerner wrote:
It's a bug. There is no swap information in the Darwin vm_stat output, so it shouldn't be reporting those at all.
There is
Clue me in. Which bit of this info is about swap ?
[meminfo] Mach Virtual Memory Statistics: (page size of 4096 bytes) Pages free: 154609. Pages active: 45696. Pages inactive: 34172. Pages wired down: 27667. "Translation faults": 702133041. Pages copy-on-write: 110185692. Pages zero filled: 148901972. Pages reactivated: 26786. Pageins: 3864958. Pageouts: 27880. Object cache: 18823165 hits of 23019598 lookups (81% hit rate)
I can understand the Pageins/Pageouts. But that sounds like swap activity, not how much swap is used.
Henrik
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Sorry my mail get sent to quickly!
---Extract of http://forums.macosxhints.com/archive/index.php/t-30544.html---
By default OS X will use a 64mb swap space file until it needs to allocate more
- a 256mb swap space with over 100-200 thousand pageouts is a good indicator of memory starvation.
Pageouts through time is the most interesting metric, as that will tell you how much the OS has moved out. Of course, even this doesn't quite tell you the complete story, as there can sometimes be bursts of activity when it doesn't have too much effect otherwise.
One good indicator of needing more memory is if, while doing whatever you consider normal work on the machine, the pagout count continues to climb, but don't watch right after booting/logging in as there will be some initial change at that time.
The other is to watch how many swapfiles exist in /private/var/vm which is affected by pageouts which haven't been brought back in.
In other words, yes, it is not so trivial to watch the swap/pageouts activity on Mac OSX ;-)
Dominique
participants (3)
-
Dominique.Frise@unil.ch
-
henrik@hswn.dk
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marco.avvisano@regione.toscana.it