While I write to an LMDB database, while it gets bigger and bigger, I can see 
%MEM in top rising steadily.

This is because %MEM is composed of three things, including "RSfd". From the 
top manpage:

RSfd  --  Resident File-Backed Memory Size (KiB)
A  subset  of resident memory (RES) representing the implicitly shared pages 
supporting program images and shared libraries. It also includes explicit file 
mappings, both private and shared.

Is it memory mapping that's resulting in the higher RSfd?

RSfd increases do not seem to have an effect on "buff/cache" or "avail Mem", 
i.e. what most people think as "RAM" is not being used up. I still want to ask, 
could too high RSfd use result in less efficient use of memory for other 
programs? I'm essentially wondering how efficient common OSes (e.g. MacOS, 
Linux) are in this area.

- Sam

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