On 23 Jun 2003 20:33:14 -0500 matt zagrabelny <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > i am running unstable. yikes! no not yikes, this is the first _serious_ > problem i have run into, and my guess is other people running unstable > dont have this problem, so i dont blame unstable.
Just wanted to confirm your assertion that it is most likely not something in a default unstable setup. I've been riding unstable for quite a while and have not had any problems with my box. However I do have close to 900b of RAM in it. OTOH if there was some leak I'd think even after 160+ days 900Mb would be hit hard. Some things to try as a temporary patch until you can figure out where the problem is. If you have a large HD you can swap do install swapd to give yourself some added swap that dynamically grows as needed. Hopefully this will let you catch the culprit before it is shut down. Also remember that when trying to diagnose the problem "no memory" is normal. Linux (the kernel) will use as much memory as it can get away with for buffers and caching. I'm hopping in at the middle here so you might have mentioned that you're aware of that but it bears repeating for any others following the conversation who is not aware. It truly is one of the most FAQs when it comes to Linux. As such when checking free use the figures on the 2nd line: [EMAIL PROTECTED]:~/News/Pan} free total used free shared buffers cached Mem: 904592 854808 49784 0 27572 439384 -/+ buffers/cache: 387852 516740 Swap: 65520 58332 7188 I know there was a program that was much like top except it recorded all processes that had run along with their peak memory usage, CPU usage over its run, etc. I forget the name of it. Hopefully someone knows of the utility I am referring to and speak up. I'd like to install it again. :) Anyway, keep at it. I run services, applications and various other sundry programs on this box and while I have pushed it into swap several times I've not yet seen it fail to return to a "normal" memory load. -- Steve C. Lamb | I'm your priest, I'm your shrink, I'm your PGP Key: 8B6E99C5 | main connection to the switchboard of souls. | -- Lenny Nero - Strange Days -------------------------------+---------------------------------------------
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