terça-feira, 17 de maio de 2016

Linux - Memoria disponivel (available) é diferente de memoria livre (free)


Linux ate my ram!!

What's going on?

Linux is borrowing unused memory for disk caching. This makes it looks like you are low on memory, but you are not! Everything is fine!

Why is it doing this?

Disk caching makes the system much faster! There are no downsides, except for confusing newbies. It does not take memory away from applications in any way, ever!

What if I want to run more applications?

If your applications want more memory, they just take back a chunk that the disk cache borrowed. Disk cache can always be given back to applications immediately! You are not low on ram!

Do I need more swap?

No, disk caching only borrows the ram that applications don't currently want. It will not use swap. If applications want more memory, they just take it back from the disk cache. They will not start swapping.

How do I stop Linux from doing this?

You can't disable disk caching. The only reason anyone ever wants to disable disk caching is because they think it takes memory away from their applications, which it doesn't! Disk cache makes applications load faster and run smoother, but it NEVER EVER takes memory away from them! Therefore, there's absolutely no reason to disable it!

Why does top and free say all my ram is used if it isn't?

This is just a differing understanding of terms. Both you and Linux agree that memory taken by applications is "used", while memory that isn't used for anything is "free". But what do you call memory that is both used for something and available for applications?
You would call that "free", but Linux calls it "used".
Memory that isYou'd call itLinux calls it
taken by applications Used Used
available for applications, and used for something Free Used
not used for anything Free Free
This "something" is what top and free calls "buffers" and "cached". Since your and Linux's terminology differs, you think you are low on ram when you're not.

How do I see how much free ram I really have?

To see how much ram is free to use for your applications, run free -m and look at the "available" column:
$ free -m
              total        used        free      shared  buff/cache   available
Mem:           1504        1491          13           0         855      869
Swap:          2047           6        2041
 
If you don't have an "available" column, look at the "free" column in the row that says "-/+ buffers/cache":
$ free -m
             total       used       free     shared    buffers     cached
Mem:          1504       1491         13          0         91        764
-/+ buffers/cache:        635        869
Swap:         2047          6       2041
 
This is your answer in megabytes. If you don't know how to read the numbers, you'll think your RAM is 99% full when it's really just 42%!

How can I verify these things?

See this page for more details and how you can experiment with disk cache.
LinuxAteMyRam.com was presented by VidarHolen.net
 
 
fonte: http://www.linuxatemyram.com/ 

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