I'm sorry, I don't have an answer for you, but I do have a question. What is your cpu utilization with that many guests? I know that vserver is extremely easy on resources; however, I think on the wiki it says that some tests show 1-2% resource utilization per guest os. with 20 guest running, that's 20-40% resource utilization just for running empty guests. Of course, your not running empty guests (and you said some of the guests are heavily used), so I would expect your server to have very high resource usage.
It may also help someone diagnose your problem by showing the output of vmstat. On 12/1/06, Chuck <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
suddenly out of nowhere, on a brand new 1 month old dual opteron machine we started getting system lockups and crashes.. I managed to track it down to a bad block in the email mailboxes.. the email server, of necessity for now must run on the host since it uses 140ip addresses. eventually we will move everyone to namespace and i can put it into a vserver.. now on to my question. we have a TON of open files I am sure. Presently there are 20 guests running, some, like a web server has 260 domain on it and it is quite busy. Are we approaching or exceeding some kind of system resource limit maybe? I never get to see the console since the server is 1000 miles away, but this morning someone read a msg that seemd to be information only. I have no clue what this means: Kernel Direct Mapping Table up to 100,000,000 @8000:d800. Any clues? Any advice how to set higher resources in the host system if this is becoming a problem? I have never had to do this before but also have not worked on a system so large. We are only about half done. I expect there to be approx 50-60 vservers on this machine with at least 15-20 of them very busy. The host install is 100% stock Gentoo with no modifications other than what is needed to run vservers. The kernel is 2.6.18-vs2.0.2-gentoo-r8 with util-vserver 0.30.211. Everything is compiled 2006.1 gcc 4.1.1 and glibc .2.4-r4:2.2. The disk subsystem is a SATA2 hardware raid5 with all partitions except root boot and swap, using LVM2. At present there are 27 mount points used. -- Chuck _______________________________________________ Vserver mailing list [email protected] http://list.linux-vserver.org/mailman/listinfo/vserver
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