cmtptr@xxxxxxxxx wrote on Wed, 28 Aug 2013 11:41 -0400: > On Mon, Aug 26, 2013 at 09:47:56AM -0400, Corey Thompson wrote: > > You are correct that git-fast-import is killed by the OOM killer, but I > > was unclear about which process was malloc()ing so much memory that the > > OOM killer got invoked (as other completely unrelated processes usually > > also get killed when this happens). > > > > Unless there's one gigantic file in one change that gets removed by > > another change, I don't think that's the problem; as I mentioned in > > another email, the machine has 32GB physical memory and the largest > > single file in the current head is only 118MB. Even if there is a very > > large transient file somewhere in the history, I seriously doubt it's > > tens of gigabytes in size. > > > > I have tried watching it with top before, but it takes several hours > > before it dies. I haven't been able to see any explosion of memory > > usage, even within the final hour, but I've never caught it just before > > it dies, either. I suspect that whatever the issue is here, it happens > > very quickly. > > > > If I'm unable to get through this today using the incremental p4 sync > > method you described, I'll try running a full-blown clone overnight with > > top in batch mode writing to a log file to see whether it catches > > anything. > > > > Thanks again, > > Corey > > Unforunately I have not made much progress. The incremental sync method > fails with the output pasted below. The change I specified is only one > change number above where that repo was cloned... I usually just do "git p4 sync @505859". The error message below crops up when things get confused. Usually after a previous error. I tend to destroy the repo and try again. Sorry I don't can't explain better what's happening here. It's not a memory issue; it reports only 24 MB used. > So I tried a 'git p4 rebase' overnight with top running, and as I feared > I did not see anything out of the ordinary. git, git-fast-import, and > git-p4 all hovered under 1.5% MEM the entire time, right up until > death. The last entry in my log shows git-fast-import at 0.8%, with git > and git-p4 at 0.0% and 0.1%, respectively. I could try again with a > more granular period, but I feel like this method is ultimately a goose > chase. Bizarre. There is no good explanation why memory usage would go up to 32 GB (?) within one top interval (3 sec ?). My theory about one gigantic object is debunked: you have only the 118 MB one. Perhaps there's some container or process memory limit, as Luke guessed, but it's not obvious here. The other big hammer is "strace". If you're still interested in playing with this, you could do: strace -vf -tt -s 200 -o /tmp/strace.out git p4 clone .... and hours later, see if something suggests itself toward the end of that output file. -- Pete -- To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe git" in the body of a message to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html