On Wednesday, January 26, 2011 1:04:02 pm Marco van Tol wrote: > On Wed, Jan 26, 2011 at 12:35:56PM -0500, John Baldwin wrote: > > On Wednesday, January 26, 2011 8:20:28 am Bartosz Stec wrote: > > > W dniu 2011-01-26 14:06, John Baldwin pisze: > > > > On Wednesday, January 26, 2011 7:20:34 am Bartosz Stec wrote: > > > >> Guys, > > > >> > > > >> could someone explain me this? > > > >> > > > >> # sysctl hw.realmem > > > >> hw.realmem: 2139029504 > > > >> > > > >> top line shows: > > > >> > > > >> Mem: 32M Active, 35M Inact, 899M Wired, 8392K Cache, 199M Buf, > > > >> 58M Free > > > >> > > > >> 32+35+899+8+199+58 = 1231MB > > > >> > > > >> Shouldn't that sum to all available ram? Or maybe I'm reading it wrong? > > > >> This machine has indeed 2GB of ram on board and showed in BIOS. > > > >> i386 FreeBSD 8.2-PRERELEASE #16: Mon Jan 17 22:28:53 CET 2011 > > > >> Cheers. > > > > First, don't include 'buf' as isn't a separate set of RAM, it is only a > > > > range > > > > of the virtual address space in the kernel. It used to be relevant > > > > when the > > > > buffer cache was separate from the VM page cache, but now it is mostly > > > > irrelevant (arguably it should just be dropped from top output). > > > > > > Thanks for the explanation. So 1231MB - 199MB Buf and we got about 1GB > > > of memory instead of 2B. > > > > > > > However, look at what hw.physmem says (and the realmem and availmem > > > > lines in > > > > dmesg). realmem is actually not that useful as it is not a count of the > > > > amount of memory, but the address of the highest memory page available. > > > > There > > > > can be less memory available than that due to "holes" in the address > > > > space for > > > > PCI memory BARs, etc. > > > > > > > OK, here you go: > > > # sysctl hw | grep mem > > > > > > hw.physmem: 2125893632 > > > hw.usermem: 1212100608 > > > hw.realmem: 2139029504 > > > hw.pci.host_mem_start: 2147483648 > > > > Humm, you should still have 2GB of RAM then. All the memory you set aside > > for ARC should be counted in the 'wired' count, so I'm not sure why you see > > 1GB of RAM rather than 2GB. > > For what its worth (seems to be the same values top shows), the sysctl's > I use to make cacti graphs of memory usage are: (Counts are in pages) > > vm.stats.vm.v_page_size > > vm.stats.vm.v_wire_count > vm.stats.vm.v_active_count > vm.stats.vm.v_inactive_count > vm.stats.vm.v_cache_count > vm.stats.vm.v_free_count > > Using the output of those sysctls I allways get a cacti graph which at > least very much seems to account for all memory, and has a flat surface > in a stacked graph.
These sysctls are exactly what top uses. There is also a 'v_page_count' which is a total count of pages. -- John Baldwin _______________________________________________ [email protected] mailing list http://lists.freebsd.org/mailman/listinfo/freebsd-stable To unsubscribe, send any mail to "[email protected]"
