RE: Clearing out inactive memory in the in_d state without a reboot.

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We are running 2.4.21-20.

Regards

[IMAGE]
|+--------------------------+---------------------------------------------|
||   "Mike Burger"          |                                             |
||   <mburger@bubbanfriends.|           To:        "General Red Hat Linux |
||   org>                   |   discussion list" <redhat-list@xxxxxxxxxx> |
||   Sent by:               |           cc:                               |
||   redhat-list-bounces@red|           Subject:        RE: Clearing out  |
||   hat.com                |   inactive memory in the in_d state without |
||                          |   a  reboot.                                |
||   17/08/2005 22:02       |                                             |
||   Please respond to      |                                             |
||   General Red Hat Linux  |                                             |
||   discussion list        |                                             |
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On Wed, August 17, 2005 8:38 am, Smith, Albert said:
>
>
>> -----Original Message-----
>> From: redhat-list-bounces@xxxxxxxxxx
>>
>> Sorry about before i meant in_d not inet.d as previously stated.
>>
>> Any advice on this problem would be great.
>>
>> Regards
>>
>> Andrew Bridgeman
>>
>> --------------------------------------------------------------
>>
>> Old Question
>>
>> Could someone please advise on the best way of clearing
>> Init_d memory so it gets flushed out to disk. I am running
>> Redhat WS and ES version 3. However i cannot reboot these
>> machines at present so i need to do it while they are
>> on-line. We are having a problem with all of our Linux
>> machines not automatically flushing to disk. Below is what i
>> see currently on the top command.
>>
>> Mem:  3599032k av, 2926964k used,  672068k free   82052k buff
>>  469844k actv, 1731916k in_d,   54940k in_c  Swap: 2044072k
>> av,  0k used, 2044072k free   2614264k cached
>
> I actually have a service call open with Dell Gold Support about this.
> Apparently this is a known issue in the kernel with kswapd not releasing
> the memory properly. They are currently working with RedHat engineering
to
> develop a solution.

Out of curiosity, with which kernel(s) are you seeing this type of issue?

I ask because, running FC3, I find that if I stick with the old
kernel-2.6.11-1.27, I'm doing well, but running any of the released
kernel-2.6.12 packages (currently, I have 2.6.12-1.372 installed), I've
been experiencing system freezes, after 2-3 days of uptime.

Unfortunately, nothing shows up in dmesg, /var/log/messages, and with
screen blanking, I can't see what was on the console, to get a better idea
of what is going on.

I've reverted back to 2.6.11-1.27, for now.

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