Thread: Why does "checkpointer" is consumig ~1.2Gb of RAM?

Why does "checkpointer" is consumig ~1.2Gb of RAM?

From
Edson Richter
Date:
I'm curious about the "checkpointer" process and its configuration.
What are the configuration options that affects the checkpointer process?
Currently, under load, this process goes up to about 1.2GB of RAM:




--

Edson Carlos Ericksson Richter
Sistemas para Bibliotecas, Escolinhas Infantis
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"A mente que se abre a uma nova ideia jamais voltará ao seu tamanho original"
- Albert Einstein

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Re: Why does "checkpointer" is consumig ~1.2Gb of RAM?

From
Scott Marlowe
Date:

On Sun, Mar 30, 2014 at 8:43 PM, Edson Richter <edsonrichter@hotmail.com> wrote:
I'm curious about the "checkpointer" process and its configuration.
What are the configuration options that affects the checkpointer process?
Currently, under load, this process goes up to about 1.2GB of RAM:




--


No it really doesn't. VIRT is every thing it touches whether it uses it individually or with other processes. RES is what THIS process is using all by itself. SHR is what it's accessing of shared memory. Here's a short explanation of what those three values mean: http://linuxpoison.blogspot.com/2009/10/what-is-difference-among-virt-res-and.html

Also for a more technical one run "man top" and search for RES, SHR, and VIRT
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Re: Why does "checkpointer" is consumig ~1.2Gb of RAM?

From
Edson Richter
Date:
Em 31/03/2014 00:38, Scott Marlowe escreveu:

On Sun, Mar 30, 2014 at 8:43 PM, Edson Richter <edsonrichter@hotmail.com> wrote:
I'm curious about the "checkpointer" process and its configuration.
What are the configuration options that affects the checkpointer process?
Currently, under load, this process goes up to about 1.2GB of RAM:




--


No it really doesn't. VIRT is every thing it touches whether it uses it individually or with other processes. RES is what THIS process is using all by itself. SHR is what it's accessing of shared memory. Here's a short explanation of what those three values mean: http://linuxpoison.blogspot.com/2009/10/what-is-difference-among-virt-res-and.html

Also for a more technical one run "man top" and search for RES, SHR, and VIRT

Yes, I understand that. That's why I've asked: why is checkpointer process consuming 1.2Gb of RAM (1215M RES more precisely), and which parameter affects its memory consumption?

Thanks,

Edson

--

Edson Carlos Ericksson Richter
Sistemas para Bibliotecas, Escolinhas Infantis
Projetos sob medida para sua empresa
Celular:(51) 9318-9766
(51) 8585-0796
"A mente que se abre a uma nova ideia jamais voltará ao seu tamanho original"
- Albert Einstein

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Re: Why does "checkpointer" is consumig ~1.2Gb of RAM?

From
Scott Marlowe
Date:
It's not. If the RES shows 1215M And the SHR is 1214M, then checkpointer is only using 1M. The difference between the two is the shared memory. RES includes SHR.


On Mon, Mar 31, 2014 at 1:44 PM, Edson Richter <edsonrichter@hotmail.com> wrote:
Em 31/03/2014 00:38, Scott Marlowe escreveu:

On Sun, Mar 30, 2014 at 8:43 PM, Edson Richter <edsonrichter@hotmail.com> wrote:
I'm curious about the "checkpointer" process and its configuration.
What are the configuration options that affects the checkpointer process?
Currently, under load, this process goes up to about 1.2GB of RAM:




--


No it really doesn't. VIRT is every thing it touches whether it uses it individually or with other processes. RES is what THIS process is using all by itself. SHR is what it's accessing of shared memory. Here's a short explanation of what those three values mean: http://linuxpoison.blogspot.com/2009/10/what-is-difference-among-virt-res-and.html

Also for a more technical one run "man top" and search for RES, SHR, and VIRT

Yes, I understand that. That's why I've asked: why is checkpointer process consuming 1.2Gb of RAM (1215M RES more precisely), and which parameter affects its memory consumption?

Thanks,

Edson


--

Edson Carlos Ericksson Richter
Sistemas para Bibliotecas, Escolinhas Infantis
Projetos sob medida para sua empresa
Celular:(51) 9318-9766
(51) 8585-0796
"A mente que se abre a uma nova ideia jamais voltará ao seu tamanho original"
- Albert Einstein




--
To understand recursion, one must first understand recursion.
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Re: Why does "checkpointer" is consumig ~1.2Gb of RAM?

From
Edson Richter
Date:
Em 31/03/2014 17:06, Scott Marlowe escreveu:
It's not. If the RES shows 1215M And the SHR is 1214M, then checkpointer is only using 1M. The difference between the two is the shared memory. RES includes SHR.

Thanks, now I understand.

Regards,

Edson




On Mon, Mar 31, 2014 at 1:44 PM, Edson Richter <edsonrichter@hotmail.com> wrote:
Em 31/03/2014 00:38, Scott Marlowe escreveu:

On Sun, Mar 30, 2014 at 8:43 PM, Edson Richter <edsonrichter@hotmail.com> wrote:
I'm curious about the "checkpointer" process and its configuration.
What are the configuration options that affects the checkpointer process?
Currently, under load, this process goes up to about 1.2GB of RAM:




--


No it really doesn't. VIRT is every thing it touches whether it uses it individually or with other processes. RES is what THIS process is using all by itself. SHR is what it's accessing of shared memory. Here's a short explanation of what those three values mean: http://linuxpoison.blogspot.com/2009/10/what-is-difference-among-virt-res-and.html

Also for a more technical one run "man top" and search for RES, SHR, and VIRT

Yes, I understand that. That's why I've asked: why is checkpointer process consuming 1.2Gb of RAM (1215M RES more precisely), and which parameter affects its memory consumption?

Thanks,

Edson


--

Edson Carlos Ericksson Richter
Sistemas para Bibliotecas, Escolinhas Infantis
Projetos sob medida para sua empresa
Celular:(51) 9318-9766
(51) 8585-0796
"A mente que se abre a uma nova ideia jamais voltará ao seu tamanho original"
- Albert Einstein




--
To understand recursion, one must first understand recursion.


--

Edson Carlos Ericksson Richter
Sistemas para Bibliotecas, Escolinhas Infantis
Projetos sob medida para sua empresa
Celular:(51) 9318-9766
(51) 8585-0796
"A mente que se abre a uma nova ideia jamais voltará ao seu tamanho original"
- Albert Einstein

Attachment

Re: Why does "checkpointer" is consumig ~1.2Gb of RAM?

From
Scott Marlowe
Date:
And yet I still got it wrong. Bad day for me. Should be:

The difference between the two is the memory it's using.

Bad day apparently.

On Mon, Mar 31, 2014 at 2:46 PM, Edson Richter <edsonrichter@hotmail.com> wrote:
Em 31/03/2014 17:06, Scott Marlowe escreveu:
It's not. If the RES shows 1215M And the SHR is 1214M, then checkpointer is only using 1M. The difference between the two is the shared memory. RES includes SHR.

Thanks, now I understand.

Regards,

Edson





On Mon, Mar 31, 2014 at 1:44 PM, Edson Richter <edsonrichter@hotmail.com> wrote:
Em 31/03/2014 00:38, Scott Marlowe escreveu:

On Sun, Mar 30, 2014 at 8:43 PM, Edson Richter <edsonrichter@hotmail.com> wrote:
I'm curious about the "checkpointer" process and its configuration.
What are the configuration options that affects the checkpointer process?
Currently, under load, this process goes up to about 1.2GB of RAM:




--


No it really doesn't. VIRT is every thing it touches whether it uses it individually or with other processes. RES is what THIS process is using all by itself. SHR is what it's accessing of shared memory. Here's a short explanation of what those three values mean: http://linuxpoison.blogspot.com/2009/10/what-is-difference-among-virt-res-and.html

Also for a more technical one run "man top" and search for RES, SHR, and VIRT

Yes, I understand that. That's why I've asked: why is checkpointer process consuming 1.2Gb of RAM (1215M RES more precisely), and which parameter affects its memory consumption?

Thanks,

Edson


--

Edson Carlos Ericksson Richter
Sistemas para Bibliotecas, Escolinhas Infantis
Projetos sob medida para sua empresa
Celular:(51) 9318-9766
(51) 8585-0796
"A mente que se abre a uma nova ideia jamais voltará ao seu tamanho original"
- Albert Einstein




--
To understand recursion, one must first understand recursion.


--

Edson Carlos Ericksson Richter
Sistemas para Bibliotecas, Escolinhas Infantis
Projetos sob medida para sua empresa
Celular:(51) 9318-9766
(51) 8585-0796
"A mente que se abre a uma nova ideia jamais voltará ao seu tamanho original"
- Albert Einstein




--
To understand recursion, one must first understand recursion.
Attachment