On Wed, Jan 12, 2011 at 1:59 PM, Kaddeh wrote:
> So, I have run into an interesting problem while building out a web server
> for a client which I haven't come across before and I was hoping that the
> list would be a good way for me to find the answer.
>
> A little beckground on the systems:
> P
Am 13.01.2011 18:59, schrieb Kaddeh:
I have a standard 2x RAM swap size of 4gb.
The problem that I am seeing though is that the applications (MySQL and
apache) are segfaulting -before- the system starts to swap, almost where
they have an aversion to using swap.
What does cat /proc/sys/vm/swappi
yes, but that should have an effect on swap space.
Cheers
Kad
On Thu, Jan 13, 2011 at 11:56 AM, Bill Longman wrote:
> On 01/13/2011 09:59 AM, Kaddeh wrote:
> > I have a standard 2x RAM swap size of 4gb.
> > The problem that I am seeing though is that the applications (MySQL and
> > apache) are
On 1/12/2011 10:59 AM, Kaddeh wrote:
So, I have run into an interesting problem while building out a web
server for a client which I haven't come across before and I was hoping
that the list would be a good way for me to find the answer.
A little beckground on the systems:
P4 @ 3.0Ghz
2GB PC2 420
On 01/13/2011 09:59 AM, Kaddeh wrote:
> I have a standard 2x RAM swap size of 4gb.
> The problem that I am seeing though is that the applications (MySQL and
> apache) are segfaulting -before- the system starts to swap, almost where
> they have an aversion to using swap.
Are you running 32 bits?
I have a standard 2x RAM swap size of 4gb.
The problem that I am seeing though is that the applications (MySQL and
apache) are segfaulting -before- the system starts to swap, almost where
they have an aversion to using swap.
Cheers
Kad
On Thu, Jan 13, 2011 at 9:34 AM, Stroller wrote:
>
> On 12/
On 12/1/2011, at 10:47pm, Kaddeh wrote:
> ...
> First, addressing the SQL issue and why I think that that could be one of
> the causes. The entire site, for the most part is all in one giant DB
> (~9GB) a significant part of that is a 3gb table full of raw image data
> (yes, I know that this is a
Matthew,
Default settings for both my.cnf and httpd.conf are defaults, however, I
would assume that a restart of a service would clear up the memory that was
used by child processes.
The only things that are really different in my.cnf is the base stuff like
bin-log and such for doing DB replicatio
On Wed, Jan 12, 2011 at 4:47 PM, Kaddeh wrote:
> Jarry,
>
> Thanks for the monitoring advice, I am checking out monit right now.
>
> In terms of what is the root cause of the issue, I have narrowed it down to
> either write caching of a SQL cache issue.
>
> First, addressing the SQL issue and why
Jarry,
Thanks for the monitoring advice, I am checking out monit right now.
In terms of what is the root cause of the issue, I have narrowed it down to
either write caching of a SQL cache issue.
First, addressing the SQL issue and why I think that that could be one of
the causes. The entire sit
On 12. 1. 2011 19:59, Kaddeh wrote:
P4 @ 3.0Ghz
2GB PC2 4200
2x 250GB drives in RAID1
The system configurations are default for the most part with the server
running MySQL and Apache.
The problem that I am running into at this point, however is that the
machine seems to run out of memory and wil
11 matches
Mail list logo