Date: Tue, 3 Mar 2009 06:40:25 -0900 From: Mel <fbsd.questions@rachie.is-a-geek.net> To: freebsd-questions@freebsd.org Cc: Andrew Moran <sneepre@mac.com> Subject: Re: SpamAssassin/Perl eating enormous amounts of memory? Message-ID: <200903030640.25554.fbsd.questions@rachie.is-a-geek.net> In-Reply-To: <19C0CCFC-CBD5-4822-8838-4F10C4792C23@mac.com> References: <8806A36E-A839-481A-8E59-9F79DEB6B51A@me.com> <200903021439.55092.fbsd.questions@rachie.is-a-geek.net> <19C0CCFC-CBD5-4822-8838-4F10C4792C23@mac.com>
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On Monday 02 March 2009 16:21:53 Andrew Moran wrote: > > What's even weirder is that the process gets that far. Did you play > > with > > kern.maxdsiz loader tuneable? > > If so, set it lower, so you can at least have the machine in a > > usable state at > > all times. 4G should be enough for any process and should give > > enough time > > for you to spot the leak and get a ktrace. > > Nope, I haven't tweaked any kernel settings, just using the generic > DEFAULT amd64 kernel. I've been way about tweaking settings because > I don't fully understand what the 'correct' values for my setup are. Could you show kenv kern.maxdsiz and if unset limits -H -d? Looks like it's 32G on my 6.x amd64, in which case setting it is a good idea. echo 'kern.maxdsiz="8G"' >> /boot/loader.conf echo 'kern.defdsiz="4G"' >> /boot/loader.conf would set it to 4G soft limit, 8G hard limit. The difference between soft and hard is, that the limits(1) program can be used to run a process with more then 4G allocatable memory and nothing can run with more then 8G, until loader tunable is changed and a reboot is done. I really have no idea why on amd64 this default is so high, surely 32G for a process is an extreme circumstance, for which one would require 4 physical CPU's to begin with. -- Mel Problem with today's modular software: they start with the modules and never get to the software part.
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