On Thu, Nov 13, 2008 at 02:29:38PM +0100, Mike Gallamore wrote: > Similar on Solaris, they have a built in utility called pmap: > > pmap <pid> gives output just about total virtual memory, ex: > FF3F6000 8K rwx-- /lib/ld.so.1 > FF3FA000 8K rwxs- [ anon ] > FFBE0000 128K rwx-- [ stack ] > total 29632K > > pmap -x <pid> gives extended info ex: > FF3F6000 8 8 8 - rwx-- ld.so.1 > FF3FA000 8 8 - - rwxs- [ anon ] > FFBE0000 128 128 64 - rwx-- [ stack ] > -------- ------- ------- ------- ------- > total Kb 29632 26088 1584 - > > We are currently running Samba 3.2.4 on our system. I can't remember > what our memory footprint was before we upgraded from 3.0.24. That > said, with the amount of RAM on our system we don't get more than 70% > RAM use at any time, even while driving 2 tape robots and 30 > filesystem/raid arrays from the box.
Well, 32GB for just 117 users is just way over the top. Samba alone should be able to work with a LOT less memory. How does the Solaris pmap calculate the 29632k? Adding up the numbers above that I end up at 144k which is probably too little. Volker
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