Arnau Rebassa i Villalonga <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
>    I have a server with 4GB of RAM and I wanted to know how much memory
> is being used by a PostgreSQL. To do so I have executed the following:

>    ps -A -o rss,vsz,command|grep postgres | awk '{rss += $1; vsz += $2 }
> END { print "Real: ",rss/1024"MB Virtual: ",vsz/1024"MB" }'

Depending on the details of your ps command, this is likely counting
Postgres' shared memory area over again for each backend.  It's
definitely counting the executable-program image over again for each
backend, even though on any modern system those pages will be shared.
So it's no surprise that you get a number a lot larger than the actual
RAM footprint.

I don't know of any good portable way to get the number you want :-(.
If your ps can distinguish shared and unshared pages, adding up all the
unshared pages and counting one instance of the shared pages will be
reasonably close.

                        regards, tom lane

---------------------------(end of broadcast)---------------------------
TIP 1: if posting/reading through Usenet, please send an appropriate
       subscribe-nomail command to [EMAIL PROTECTED] so that your
       message can get through to the mailing list cleanly

Reply via email to