Re: Benchmarking a large server

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Greg Smith wrote:
On 05/09/2011 11:13 PM, Shaun Thomas wrote:
Take a look at /proc/sys/vm/dirty_ratio and /proc/sys/vm/dirty_background_ratio if you have an older Linux system, or /proc/sys/vm/dirty_bytes, and /proc/sys/vm/dirty_background_bytes with a newer one. On older systems for instance, those are set to 40 and 20 respectively (recent kernels cut these in half).

1/4 actually; 10% and 5% starting in kernel 2.6.22. The main sources of this on otherwise new servers I see are RedHat Linux RHEL5 systems running 2.6.18. But as you say, even the lower defaults of the newer kernels can be way too much on a system with lots of RAM.

Ugh...we're both right, sort of. 2.6.22 dropped them to 5/10: http://kernelnewbies.org/Linux_2_6_22 as I said. But on the new Scientific Linux 6 box I installed yesterday, they're at 10/20--as you suggested.

Can't believe I'm going to need a table by kernel version and possibly distribution to keep this all straight now, what a mess.

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Greg Smith   2ndQuadrant US    greg@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx   Baltimore, MD
PostgreSQL Training, Services, and 24x7 Support  www.2ndQuadrant.us
"PostgreSQL 9.0 High Performance": http://www.2ndQuadrant.com/books


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