I believe "_and it worked_" is what's really important. Once I get the Samba issue worked out I'll be enabling MySQL and phpGroupware on their server, thereby heading off a move to Exchange by one of their in-house techs.
Do you have Samba running on yours? Christopher Maujean ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) wrote*: > >after no response from the folks working on postgresql, and having the >same type of problem, nothing looked like it had the memory, but it >wasn't available to other programs. Drastic, sure, but it was short >term, low budget fix, _and it worked_. > >On Thu, 2001-12-20 at 09:48, Bob Crandell wrote: >> They aren't running PostgreSQL. Your fix is pretty drastic. >> If you ran Top with the M option, did you see a program using up the memory? >> >> Christopher Maujean ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) wrote*: >> > >> >PostgreSQL used to have a memory leak that would take all 2gigs of ram >> >from my machine. I wrote a perl script that filled an array with 'A''s >> >infinitely, until it ran out of memory once it crashed, it gave all that >> >memory back. Ran it as a cron job every half hour. >> > >> > >> >On Thu, 2001-12-20 at 09:12, Bob Crandell wrote: >> >> That shows how much memory each program is using but it doesn't add up to the amount >> >> of memory being used. There is over a half Gig of RAM and 96 M of swap. It all >> >> gets used up just before it goes down. >> >> >> >> Is there another utility? >> >> >> >> Thanks >> >> >> >> Bob Miller ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) wrote*: >> >> > >> >> >Bob Crandell wrote: >> >> > >> >> >> I have a client with a Linux server running Samba. Something is >> >> >> filling up memory and the swap space. This is dragging down to the >> >> >> point where it's unusable. They have to reboot almost every day. >> >> >> >> >> >> My question is how do I find out what is taking up all that memory? >> >> > >> >> >Run top, then type "M" (capital M). Watch the size column. >> >> > >> >> > >> >> > >> > >> >PGP: >> >--------------------------------------------------------------- >> >http://www.keyserver.net/ >> >KeyID: EFAF4176 >> >Fingerprint: 55E6 4DE1 D7D3 361E F265 C094 46F2 7B62 EFAF 4176 >> >--------------------------------------------------------------- >> > >> > > >PGP: >--------------------------------------------------------------- >http://www.keyserver.net/ >KeyID: EFAF4176 >Fingerprint: 55E6 4DE1 D7D3 361E F265 C094 46F2 7B62 EFAF 4176 >--------------------------------------------------------------- > >
