Date: Tue, 21 Aug 2012 18:24:48 -0500 From: Alan Cox <alc@rice.edu> To: =?ISO-8859-1?Q?=22Gezeala_M=2E_Bacu=F1o_II=22?= <gezeala@gmail.com> Cc: alc@freebsd.org, freebsd-performance@freebsd.org, Andrey Zonov <andrey@zonov.org>, kib@freebsd.org Subject: Re: vm.kmem_size_max and vm.kmem_size capped at 329853485875 (~307GB) Message-ID: <503418C0.5000901@rice.edu> In-Reply-To: <CAJKO3mXQ2_XrdxWgE6JRVOpMu_cEBa_=nJCxFDJ%2BJ=f5_OUsPQ@mail.gmail.com> References: <CAJKO3mU8bfn=jmWNSpvAXOR1AWyAAM0Sio1D1PnOYg8P59V9cg@mail.gmail.com> <CAGH67wS=jue7%2B92jSCyaydOLHC=hPwtndV64FVtC7nhDsPvFng@mail.gmail.com> <CAGH67wTNfW45pgJ_%2BVn_sX%2BP9M5B5wzPT9270dRmWjYF6KerrA@mail.gmail.com> <B74BE4AB-AB67-45BD-BFC3-9AE33A85751C@gmail.com> <502DEAD9.6050304@zonov.org> <CAJKO3mVWOFa9Cby_EWsf_OFHux7YBGSV7aGYSP2YANeJkqZtoQ@mail.gmail.com> <CAJKO3mU1NdkQwNSEDk3wWyLN700=dQ0_jSXt_sx-ABpywNjfsg@mail.gmail.com> <502EB081.3030801@rice.edu> <CAJKO3mWEXUvLtdSvmjgNhhyVqw4j0DuTYm9MqLd9=i9==WLAaA@mail.gmail.com> <502FE98E.40807@rice.edu> <CAJKO3mVUMRfkUpSuk0fDdnEMc3hr087iH5u8b5N60CnPs-gP1g@mail.gmail.com> <50325634.7090904@rice.edu> <CAJKO3mXPZVhLo=si%2BEoFPGD5R_m297xedRFY-0N__WOsZBaiCA@mail.gmail.com> <CAJKO3mXQ2_XrdxWgE6JRVOpMu_cEBa_=nJCxFDJ%2BJ=f5_OUsPQ@mail.gmail.com>
next in thread | previous in thread | raw e-mail | index | archive | help
On 8/20/2012 8:26 PM, Gezeala M. Bacuņo II wrote: > On Mon, Aug 20, 2012 at 9:07 AM, Gezeala M. Bacuņo II <gezeala@gmail.com> wrote: >> On Mon, Aug 20, 2012 at 8:22 AM, Alan Cox <alc@rice.edu> wrote: >>> On 08/18/2012 19:57, Gezeala M. Bacuņo II wrote: >>>> On Sat, Aug 18, 2012 at 12:14 PM, Alan Cox<alc@rice.edu> wrote: >>>>> On 08/17/2012 17:08, Gezeala M. Bacuņo II wrote: >>>>>> On Fri, Aug 17, 2012 at 1:58 PM, Alan Cox<alc@rice.edu> wrote: >>>>>>> vm.kmem_size controls the maximum size of the kernel's heap, i.e., the >>>>>>> region where the kernel's slab and malloc()-like memory allocators >>>>>>> obtain >>>>>>> their memory. While this heap may occupy the largest portion of the >>>>>>> kernel's virtual address space, it cannot occupy the entirety of the >>>>>>> address >>>>>>> space. There are other things that must be given space within the >>>>>>> kernel's >>>>>>> address space, for example, the file system buffer map. >>>>>>> >>>>>>> ZFS does not, however, use the regular file system buffer cache. The >>>>>>> ARC >>>>>>> takes its place, and the ARC abuses the kernel's heap like nothing >>>>>>> else. >>>>>>> So, if you are running a machine that only makes trivial use of a >>>>>>> non-ZFS >>>>>>> file system, like you boot from UFS, but store all of your data in ZFS, >>>>>>> then >>>>>>> you can dramatically reduce the size of the buffer map via boot loader >>>>>>> tuneables and proportionately increase vm.kmem_size. >>>>>>> >>>>>>> Any further increases in the kernel virtual address space size will, >>>>>>> however, require code changes. Small changes, but changes nonetheless. >>>>>>> >>>>>>> Alan >>>>>>> >> <<snip>> >>>>> Your objective should be to reduce the value of "sysctl vfs.maxbufspace". >>>>> You can do this by setting the loader.conf tuneable "kern.maxbcache" to >>>>> the >>>>> desired value. >>>>> >>>>> What does your machine currently report for "sysctl vfs.maxbufspace"? >>>>> >>>> Here you go: >>>> vfs.maxbufspace: 54967025664 >>>> kern.maxbcache: 0 >>> >>> Try setting kern.maxbcache to two billion and adding 50 billion to the >>> setting of vm.kmem_size{,_max}. >>> > 2 : 50 ==>> is this the ratio for further tuning > kern.maxbcache:vm.kmem_size? Is kern.maxbcache also in bytes? > No, this is not a ratio. Yes, kern.maxbcache is in bytes. Basically, for every byte that you subtract from vfs.maxbufspace, through setting kern.maxbcache, you can add a byte to vm.kmem_size{,_max}. Alan
Want to link to this message? Use this URL: <https://mail-archive.FreeBSD.org/cgi/mid.cgi?503418C0.5000901>