Hi,

are there any updates what might cause the memory leak? I have just tried 
Ubuntu 10.10 with the
OMSA 6.3 (from the Dell repository) and the problem persists.

Best regards,
Karsten

On 10.09.2010 20:27, [email protected] wrote:
> All,
> The memory leak issue is still being investigated.  Current indications are 
> that the problem lies in one of the libraries provided by the OS.  Our OS 
> engineering team is working with the OS vendors to confirm and address the 
> issue.  I am unable to provide an expected resolution date at this time.
> 
> Wayne Weilnau
> Systems Management Technologist
> Dell | OpenManage Software Development 
> 
> Please consider the environment before printing this email.
> 
> Confidentiality Notice | This e-mail message, including any attachments, is 
> for the sole use of the intended recipient(s) and may contain confidential or 
> proprietary information. Any unauthorized review, use, disclosure or 
> distribution is prohibited. If you are not the intended recipient, 
> immediately contact the sender by reply e-mail and destroy all copies of the 
> original message.
> 
> 
> -----Original Message-----
> From: linux-poweredge-bounces-Lists On Behalf Of Jim Browne
> Sent: Friday, September 10, 2010 12:06 PM
> To: Karsten Suehring
> Cc: linux-poweredge-Lists
> Subject: Re: Ubuntu 10.04 / OMSA / SNMP memory issue
> 
> On Fri, Sep 10, 2010 at 05:29:21PM +0200, Karsten Suehring wrote:
>> I'm using OMSA on different PowerEdge machines with Ubuntu Linux (64-bit)
>> as my OS.
> [...]
>> Then I tried upgrading the Ubuntu release on one machine to 10.04 (lucid)
>> and noticed that the> dsm_sa_snmpd process memory usage grew about 30 MByte
>> on each SNMP call from the check_openmanage script.
> [...]
>> Does anybody have an idea how to solve this problem?
> 
> I posted about this to the list a few weeks ago.  Someone from Dell said
> they were looking into it.  My temporary solution is inelegant, but
> functional:
> 
> r...@elided:~# cat /etc/cron.hourly/dell-restart-snmp 
> #!/usr/bin/perl -w
> 
> use strict;
> 
> my $trace = 0;
> my $restart;
> 
> if (-e "/etc/init.d/dataeng") {
>     my $status = `/usr/sbin/service dataeng status | grep snmpd`;
>     print "status is $status" if $trace;
>     $restart = "not running" if ($status =~ m/stopped/);
>     if ($status =~ m/.*pid (\d+)/) {
> print "PID $1\n" if $trace;
> my $mem = `cut -f1 -d' ' /proc/$1/statm`;
> print "Pid is $1 mem is $mem\n" if $trace;
> # 524288 4k pages is 2 GB
> $restart = "too much memory: $mem" if ($mem > 524288);
>     }
> 
>     if ($restart) {
>         `/usr/sbin/service dataeng restart`;
>         print "Restarted due to $restart\n";
>     }
> }
> 
> _______________________________________________
> Linux-PowerEdge mailing list
> [email protected]
> https://lists.us.dell.com/mailman/listinfo/linux-poweredge
> Please read the FAQ at http://lists.us.dell.com/faq

_______________________________________________
Linux-PowerEdge mailing list
[email protected]
https://lists.us.dell.com/mailman/listinfo/linux-poweredge
Please read the FAQ at http://lists.us.dell.com/faq

Reply via email to