On Wed, 2014-01-29 at 00:34 +0100, Thomas Meyer wrote:
> Hi,
> 
> should pulseaudio actually use that much memory?
> 
> $ cat status
> Name: pulseaudio
> State:        S (sleeping)
> Tgid: 1972
> Ngid: 0
> Pid:  1972
> PPid: 1
> TracerPid:    0
> Uid:  1000    1000    1000    1000
> Gid:  500     500     500     500
> FDSize:       64
> Groups:       4 6 10 11 36 63 464 468 469 500 
> VmPeak:        2326912 kB
> VmSize:        2326912 kB
> VmLck:               0 kB
> VmPin:               0 kB
> VmHWM:         1843468 kB
> VmRSS:         1843468 kB
> VmData:        1987020 kB
> VmStk:             136 kB
> VmExe:              80 kB
> VmLib:           15592 kB
> VmPTE:            4164 kB
> VmSwap:            524 kB
> Threads:      3
> SigQ: 0/62970
> SigPnd:       0000000000000000
> ShdPnd:       0000000000000000
> SigBlk:       0000000000000000
> SigIgn:       0000000000381000
> SigCgt:       0000000180004a43
> CapInh:       0000000000000000
> CapPrm:       0000000000000000
> CapEff:       0000000000000000
> CapBnd:       0000001fffffffff
> Seccomp:      0
> Cpus_allowed: 1
> Cpus_allowed_list:    0
> Mems_allowed: 1
> Mems_allowed_list:    0
> voluntary_ctxt_switches:      12348713
> nonvoluntary_ctxt_switches:   4858656

Have you tried interpreting what those numbers actually mean? This might
help: http://elinux.org/Runtime_Memory_Measurement

Note that our SHM usage can cause virtual memory size look large, and
this is a red herring.

-- Arun

_______________________________________________
pulseaudio-discuss mailing list
[email protected]
http://lists.freedesktop.org/mailman/listinfo/pulseaudio-discuss

Reply via email to