[Pacemaker] pacemaker processes RSS growth

Andrew Beekhof andrew at beekhof.net
Tue Dec 11 21:35:57 EST 2012


On Tue, Dec 11, 2012 at 5:49 PM, Vladislav Bogdanov
<bubble at hoster-ok.com> wrote:
> 11.12.2012 06:52, Vladislav Bogdanov wrote:
>> 11.12.2012 05:12, Andrew Beekhof wrote:
>>> On Mon, Dec 10, 2012 at 11:34 PM, Vladislav Bogdanov
>>> <bubble at hoster-ok.com> wrote:
>>>> 10.12.2012 09:56, Vladislav Bogdanov wrote:
>>>>> 10.12.2012 04:29, Andrew Beekhof wrote:
>>>>>> On Fri, Dec 7, 2012 at 5:37 PM, Vladislav Bogdanov <bubble at hoster-ok.com> wrote:
>>>>>>> 06.12.2012 09:04, Vladislav Bogdanov wrote:
>>>>>>>> 06.12.2012 06:05, Andrew Beekhof wrote:
>>>>>>>>> I wonder what the growth looks like with the recent libqb fix.
>>>>>>>>> That could be an explanation.
>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>> Valid point. I will watch.
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>> On a almost static cluster the only change in memory state during 24
>>>>>>> hours is +700kb of shared memory to crmd on a DC. Will look after that
>>>>>>> one for more time.
>>>>>
>>>>> It still grows. ~650-700k per day. I sampled 'maps' and 'smaps' content
>>>>> from crmd's proc and will look what differs there over the time.
>>>>
>>>> smaps tells me it may be in /dev/shm/qb-pengine-event-1735-1736-4-data.
>>>> 1735 is pengine, 1736 is crmd.
>>>>
>>>> Diff of that part:
>>>> @@ -56,13 +56,13 @@
>>>>  MMUPageSize:           4 kB
>>>>  7f427fddf000-7f42802df000 rw-s 00000000 00:0f 12332
>>>>   /dev/shm/qb-pengine-event-1735-1736-4-data
>>>>  Size:               5120 kB
>>>> -Rss:                4180 kB
>>>> -Pss:                2089 kB
>>>> +Rss:                4320 kB
>>>> +Pss:                2159 kB
>>>>  Shared_Clean:          0 kB
>>>> -Shared_Dirty:       4180 kB
>>>> +Shared_Dirty:       4320 kB
>>>>  Private_Clean:         0 kB
>>>>  Private_Dirty:         0 kB
>>>> -Referenced:         4180 kB
>>>> +Referenced:         4320 kB
>>>>  Anonymous:             0 kB
>>>>  AnonHugePages:         0 kB
>>>>  Swap:                  0 kB
>
> 'Rss' and 'Shared_Dirty' will soon reach 'Size' (now 4792 vs 5120), I'll
> look what happens then. I expect growth to stop and pages to be reused.
> If that is true, then there are no any leaks, but rather controlled fill
> of a buffer of a predefined size.

Great. Please let me know how it turns out.




More information about the Pacemaker mailing list