Shawn, What is the parameters for java? Did you use AlwaysPreTouch, give -Xms -Xmx?
I am not sure about the Linux output. But the Windows one 15,861,867(KB) is reasonable for 14g heap, I think.
Thanks, Jenny On 1/7/2016 8:15 AM, Shawn Heisey wrote:
I have seen something very odd with memory reporting in both Windows and Linux. This may not be the correct list for this question, but I am already subscribed to a very large number of mailing lists and would prefer to not add another one for a one-off question. I apologize if this is the wrong list. Take a look at these two screenshots: https://www.dropbox.com/s/64en3sar4cr1ytj/linux-solr-mem-high-shr.png?dl=0 https://www.dropbox.com/s/w4bnrb66r16lpx1/Resource%20Monitor.png?dl=0 The first one is a Linux server that I am running, the second is a Windows server that someone else is running. Both machines are running Solr. The Windows machine is running two copies of Solr, and the Solr processes are at the top of both lists. The Linux machine has an 8GB heap for its copy of Solr, and I believe that each of the copies of Solr on the Windows machine have the heap set to 14GB. In both cases, the shared memory reported is very high, with the resident (or working) memory *far* higher than the configured heap size. In the case of the Linux machine, I can illustrate that there is definitely a reporting bug. If you take the 48GB currently allocated to the disk cache, and add the *reported* 22GB resident size of the Solr process, you get 70GB ... but the machine only has 64GB total. On the Linux machine, Solr is accessing over 100GB of data via MMap (see the VIRT memory size of 121GB). This is the data that is in the disk cache. I was told that the indexes are even larger on the Windows machine. This is the Java version on the Linux machine. I am working to learn what the version is on the Windows machine. java version "1.7.0_72" Java(TM) SE Runtime Environment (build 1.7.0_72-b14) Java HotSpot(TM) 64-Bit Server VM (build 24.72-b04, mixed mode) Here are the packages providing this Java version (CentOS 6.6). I used the source RPM on the city-fan.org website and the official tarball from Oracle: java-1.7.0-oracle-jdbc-1.7.0.72-1.0.cf.x86_64 java-1.7.0-oracle-devel-1.7.0.72-1.0.cf.x86_64 java-1.7.0-oracle-1.7.0.72-1.0.cf.x86_64 Is this memory reporting problem a bug in Java or a bug in both operating systems? I do not have easy access to any other OS platforms. Thanks, Shawn _______________________________________________ hotspot-gc-use mailing list hotspot-gc-use@openjdk.java.net http://mail.openjdk.java.net/mailman/listinfo/hotspot-gc-use
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