You are using a GPT bootdisk on a non efi system - centos

While installing CentOS on "HP ProLiant DL380p Gen8 Server"
(Server have 2TB*6 Disks. with 4 Disks in RAID 5 and 2 Spares Giving me total of 5.5 TB)
I am facing this warning while installation.
"you are using a GPT bootdisk on a non efi system. This May not work.
Depending upon your BIOS........ (some long messge)"
and after install completes the System is not booting...
i have this partition Table
/ 6GB
/home 1TB
/usr 80 GB
/opt 80GB
/var 300 GB
SWAP 128 GB
/xmldata 1TB
/mysqldata 3 TB
Please advise.
Thanks
Ali

Convert the disk from GPT to MBR.
You can use a Linux live CD to boot, use gparted (or install it from EPEL if you're using CentOS), and convert it to MBR.
Also, I assumed no MS windows OS in installed on the disk. It gets a bit trickier if you want to have dual boot.

Related

Ubuntu "/run" is = to 10% available RAM

I've noticed that Ubuntu (14.04 and 16.04) creates a /run partition depending on the available RAM, and in 3 different servers i've noticed that this value is always equal to 10% of installed RAM on the server.
How to correctly bypass this value and increase this tmpfs partition on Ubuntu?
Thanks.

SWAP memory of my solaris server is used more than its threshold

SWAP memory of my solaris server is used more than its threshold, is it possible to free some space by restarting the processes which are using most of SWAP memory?
$ swap -s
total: 10820256k bytes allocated + 453808k reserved = 11274064k used, 11911648k available
$ swap -l
swapfile dev swaplo blocks free
/dev/md/dsk/d210 85,210 16 20972720 20971152
You are only using 800 KB of swap out of 10 GB (i.e. 0.008 %) which is insignificant. There is then probably nothing to worry about according to the reported statistics.
You might have a look to /tmp (or other tmpfs backed directories) to free some virtual memory.

Performace tuning of Postgres server

I have Postgres 9.1 installed on Windows server 2008 R2 machine having 32 GB RAM. For performance tuning i have to update the shared buffer to 8 GB. But after updating the shared buffer to 8 GB in postgresql.conf file i am not able to start the service. its giving error message "The Postgresql-9.1 - Postgresql server 9.1 serviceon local computer started and then stopped. Some servcies stop automatically if they are not in use by other servcies or programs".
Any one can suggest how can i update the shared buffer. your suggestions are highly appreciated...

Is there any option to limit mongodb memory usage?

I am using Mongo-DBv1.8.1. My server memory is 4GB but Mongo-DB is utilizing more than 3GB. Is there memory limitation option in Mongo-DB?.
If you are running MongoDB 3.2 or later version, you can limit the wiredTiger cache as mentioned above.
In /etc/mongod.conf add the wiredTiger part
...
# Where and how to store data.
storage:
dbPath: /var/lib/mongodb
journal:
enabled: true
wiredTiger:
engineConfig:
cacheSizeGB: 1
...
This will limit the cache size to 1GB, more info in Doc
This solved the issue for me, running ubuntu 16.04 and mongoDB 3.2
PS: After changing the config, restart the mongo daemon.
$ sudo service mongod restart
# check the status
$ sudo service mongod status
Starting in 3.2, MongoDB uses the WiredTiger as the default storage engine. Previous versions used the MMAPv1 as the default storage engine.
With WiredTiger, MongoDB utilizes both the WiredTiger internal cache and the filesystem cache.
In MongoDB 3.2, the WiredTiger internal cache, by default, will use the larger of either:
60% of RAM minus 1 GB, or
1 GB.
For systems with up to 10 GB of RAM, the new default setting is less than or equal to the 3.0 default setting (For MongoDB 3.0, the WiredTiger internal cache uses either 1 GB or half of the installed physical RAM, whichever is larger).
For systems with more than 10 GB of RAM, the new default setting is greater than the 3.0 setting.
to limit the wiredTriggered Cache Add following line to .config file :
wiredTigerCacheSizeGB = 1
This question has been asked a couple times ...
See this related question/answer (quoted below) ... how to release the caching which is used by Mongodb?
MongoDB will (at least seem) to use up a lot of available memory, but it actually leaves it up to the OS's VMM to tell it to release the memory (see Caching in the MongoDB docs.)
You should be able to release any and all memory by restarting MongoDB.
However, to some extent MongoDB isn't really "using" the memory.
For example from the MongoDB docs Checking Server Memory Usage ...
Depending on the platform you may see
the mapped files as memory in the
process, but this is not strictly
correct. Unix top may show way more
memory for mongod than is really
appropriate. The Operating System (the
virtual memory manager specifically,
depending on OS) manages the memory
where the "Memory Mapped Files"
reside. This number is usually shown
in a program like "free -lmt".
It is called "cached" memory.
MongoDB uses the LRU (Least Recently Used) cache algorithm to determine which "pages" to release, you will find some more information in these two questions ...
MongoDB limit memory
MongoDB index/RAM relationship
Mongod start with memory limit (You can't.)
You can limit mongod process usage using cgroups on Linux.
Using cgroups, our task can be accomplished in a few easy steps.
Create control group:
cgcreate -g memory:DBLimitedGroup
(make sure that cgroups binaries installed on your system, consult your favorite Linux distribution manual for how to do that)
Specify how much memory will be available for this group:
echo 16G > /sys/fs/cgroup/memory/DBLimitedGroup/memory.limit_in_bytes
This command limits memory to 16G (good thing this limits the memory for both malloc allocations and OS cache)
Now, it will be a good idea to drop pages already stayed in cache:
sync; echo 3 > /proc/sys/vm/drop_caches
And finally assign a server to created control group:
cgclassify -g memory:DBLimitedGroup \`pidof mongod\`
This will assign a running mongod process to a group limited by only 16GB memory.
source: Using Cgroups to Limit MySQL and MongoDB memory usage
I don't think you can configure how much memory MongoDB uses, but that's OK (read below).
To quote from the official source:
Virtual memory size and resident size will appear to be very large for the mongod process. This is benign: virtual memory space will be just larger than the size of the datafiles open and mapped; resident size will vary depending on the amount of memory not used by other processes on the machine.
In other words, Mongo will let other programs use memory if they ask for it.
mongod --wiredTigerCacheSizeGB 2 xx
Adding to the top voted answer, in case you are on a low memory machine and want to configure the wiredTigerCache in MBs instead of whole number GBs, use this -
storage:
wiredTiger:
engineConfig:
configString : cache_size=345M
Source - https://jira.mongodb.org/browse/SERVER-22274
For Windows it seems possible to control the amount of memory MongoDB uses, see this tutorial at Captain Codeman:
Limit MongoDB memory use on Windows without Virtualization
Not really, there are a couple of tricks to limit memory, like on Windows you can use the Windows System Resource Manager (WSRM), but generally Mongo works best on a dedicated server when it's free to use memory without much contention with other systems.
Although the operating system will try to allocate memory to other processes as they need it, in practice this can lead to performance issues if other systems have high memory requirements too.
If you really need to limit memory, and only have a single server, then your best bet is virtualization.
This can be done with cgroups, by combining knowledge from these two articles:
https://www.percona.com/blog/2015/07/01/using-cgroups-to-limit-mysql-and-mongodb-memory-usage/
http://frank2.net/cgroups-ubuntu-14-04/
You can find here a small shell script which will create config and init files for Ubuntu 14.04:
http://brainsuckerna.blogspot.com.by/2016/05/limiting-mongodb-memory-usage-with.html
Just like that:
sudo bash -c 'curl -o- http://brains.by/misc/mongodb_memory_limit_ubuntu1404.sh | bash'
There is no reason to limit MongoDB cache as by default the mongod process will take 1/2 of the memory on the machine and no more. The default storage engine is WiredTiger. "With WiredTiger, MongoDB utilizes both the WiredTiger internal cache and the filesystem cache."
You are probably looking at top and assuming that Mongo is using all the memory on your machine. That is virtual memory. Use free -m:
total used free shared buff/cache available
Mem: 7982 1487 5601 8 893 6204
Swap: 0 0 0
Only when the available metric goes to zero is your computer swapping memory out to disk. In that case your database is too large for your machine. Add another mongodb instance to your cluster.
Use these two commands in the mongod console to get information about how much virtual and physical memory Mongodb is using:
var mem = db.serverStatus().tcmalloc;
mem.tcmalloc.formattedString
------------------------------------------------
MALLOC: 360509952 ( 343.8 MiB) Bytes in use by application
MALLOC: + 477704192 ( 455.6 MiB) Bytes in page heap freelist
MALLOC: + 33152680 ( 31.6 MiB) Bytes in central cache freelist
MALLOC: + 2684032 ( 2.6 MiB) Bytes in transfer cache freelist
MALLOC: + 3508952 ( 3.3 MiB) Bytes in thread cache freelists
MALLOC: + 6349056 ( 6.1 MiB) Bytes in malloc metadata
MALLOC: ------------
MALLOC: = 883908864 ( 843.0 MiB) Actual memory used (physical + swap)
MALLOC: + 33611776 ( 32.1 MiB) Bytes released to OS (aka unmapped)
MALLOC: ------------
MALLOC: = 917520640 ( 875.0 MiB) Virtual address space used
MALLOC:
MALLOC: 26695 Spans in use
MALLOC: 22 Thread heaps in use
MALLOC: 4096 Tcmalloc page size
One thing you can limit is the amount of memory mongodb uses while building indexes. This is set using the maxIndexBuildMemoryUsageMegabytes setting. An example of how its set is below:
mongo --eval "db.adminCommand( { setParameter: 1, maxIndexBuildMemoryUsageMegabytes: 70000 } )"
this worked for me on an AWS instance, to at least clear the cached memory mongo was using. after this you can see how your settings have had effect.
ubuntu#hongse:~$ free -m
total used free shared buffers cached
Mem: 3952 3667 284 0 617 514
-/+ buffers/cache: 2535 1416
Swap: 0 0 0
ubuntu#hongse:~$ sudo su
root#hongse:/home/ubuntu# sync; echo 3 > /proc/sys/vm/drop_caches
root#hongse:/home/ubuntu# free -m
total used free shared buffers cached
Mem: 3952 2269 1682 0 1 42
-/+ buffers/cache: 2225 1726
Swap: 0 0 0
If you're using Docker, reading the Docker image documentation (in the Setting WiredTiger cache size limits section) I found out that they set the default to consume all available memory regardless of memory limits you may have imposed on the container, so you would have to limit the RAM usage directly from the DB configuration.
Create you mongod.conf file:
# Limits cache storage
storage:
wiredTiger:
engineConfig:
cacheSizeGB: 1 # Set the size you want
Now you can assign that config file to the container: docker run --name mongo-container -v /path/to/mongod.conf:/etc/mongo/mongod.conf -d mongo --config /etc/mongo/mongod.conf
Alternatively you could use a docker-compose.yml file:
version: '3'
services:
mongo:
image: mongo:4.2
# Sets the config file
command: --config /etc/mongo/mongod.conf
volumes:
- ./config/mongo/mongod.conf:/etc/mongo/mongod.conf
# Others settings...

VMWare Windows XP session says 'insufficient disk space' for a 6 gb file but there's 14 gb free

My VMWare Windows XP session says 'insufficient disk space' to copy in a 6 gb database dump but there's more than 14 gb free :( .
It's a growable disk. It;s currently 5.5 GB in size.
Any suggestions?
Is this an NTFS volume? If it's FAT, you're overrunning the limit on file size (~4GB).
Also, this may be a quirk with growable volumes... maybe try resizing? Or change the disktype to preallocated?
I thought the filesize limit in xp was 2gb. Or are we not talking about 1 file here?