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From: Katrina McClelan <kitkat@marcus.pants.nu>
Newsgroups: nu.kanga.list.mud-dev
Date: Fri, 11 Jun 1999 11:33:21 -0700 (PDT)
References: [1]
Organization: Kanga.Nu
On Fri, 11 Jun 1999, Petri Virkkula wrote:
> >>>>> "Matthew" == Matthew Mihaly <diablo@best.com> writes:
>
> Matthew> Hmm! So TOP isn't particularly accurate then? I was wondering
>
> It is accurately showing how much a process is _directly_
> using memory. In my example there was 443M missing. My
> _guess_ was that it was mostly used by a disk cache,
If this is a linux system that is very likely:
[kitkat@marcus kitkat]$ free
total used free shared buffers cached
Mem: 30760 27456 3304 25452 10532 7456
-/+ buffers/cache: 9468 21292
Swap: 72288 4 72284
30760k availible, 27456k used, 3304 "free", but of that, 21292k is set
aside as buffers (9468k of these buffers in use), so only about 6000k
actually in use by programs. (note that if I start a compile or
something, the buffer space will disappear as memory is needed for the
user process.
If you are using FreeBSD this is also likely:
bash-2.03$ top -b
last pid: 21162; load averages: 0.96, 0.89, 0.76 12:27:58
50 processes: 1 running, 49 sleeping
Mem: 70M Active, 17M Inact, 24M Wired, 69M Cache, 8161K Buf, 71M Free
^^^^^^^^^
Swap: 512M Total, 64K Used, 512M Free
Memory used this way is a very good thing. Especially for high I/O stuff.
UNIX is your friend :)
-Katrina
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