From owner-freebsd-questions Tue Oct 24 08:34:10 1995 Return-Path: owner-questions Received: (from root@localhost) by freefall.freebsd.org (8.6.12/8.6.6) id IAA17874 for questions-outgoing; Tue, 24 Oct 1995 08:34:10 -0700 Received: from pelican.com (pelican.com [134.24.4.62]) by freefall.freebsd.org (8.6.12/8.6.6) with SMTP id IAA17869 for ; Tue, 24 Oct 1995 08:34:05 -0700 Received: from puffin.pelican.com by pelican.com with smtp (Smail3.1.28.1 #5) id m0t7lMO-000K2wC; Tue, 24 Oct 95 08:33 WET DST Received: by puffin.pelican.com (Smail3.1.29.1 #9) id m0t7lMO-0000ReC; Tue, 24 Oct 95 08:33 PDT Message-Id: Date: Tue, 24 Oct 95 08:33 PDT From: pete@puffin.pelican.com (Pete Carah) To: questions@freebsd.org Subject: Re: Help.. FreeBSD's killing all my processes In-Reply-To: <199510240210.LAA03933@genesis.atrad.adelaide.edu.au> Sender: owner-questions@freebsd.org Precedence: bulk In article <199510240210.LAA03933@genesis.atrad.adelaide.edu.au> msmith writes: >Blair Schmittel stands accused of saying: >> I keep getting errors saying I am out of swap space. >> I have never got this message before. It says: "process ### killed by >> vm_pageout, out of swap". I had a partition mounted for swap, at least I >> thought I did. When I reboot it says: "swapon: /dev/wd0s1b not found". >> >> Whenever this happens, it kills some of my most important processes such as >> named, and telnetd. Any suggestions? > >Yeah, fix your swap problem. Go have a look and see if /dev/wd0s1b actually >exists. When I got this right & left it wouldn't have been fixed by working on the swap (until it got *BIG*); it turned out to be INN's expireover and a bogus gigantic .overview file. expireover reads in the entire .overview in a single slurp and then works from there, takes about 4x the amount of memory that the .overview is long. Fix was just deleting the bogus .overview... Check for various things like that, especially if the error comes up mostly during news.daily... If it is just random then you need more swap and/or more ram. Note that if you're using much swap then the system performance is terrible so you should (usually) either fix your job mix or add ram instead of swap... (this is different in various versions of unix now; IRIX 5.x backs all ram by swap so you need enough for all running processes. At least it lets you add swap on the fly in ordinary files, which we aren't up to yet.) -- Pete