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Date:      Fri, 18 Aug 2000 01:42:09 -0400 (EDT)
From:      Bosko Milekic <bmilekic@dsuper.net>
To:        Xiaowei Yang <yxw@cordelia.lcs.mit.edu>
Cc:        Xiaowei Yang <yxw@MIT.EDU>, freebsd-net@FreeBSD.ORG
Subject:   Re: how to set nmbufs
Message-ID:  <Pine.BSF.4.21.0008180133260.6936-100000@jehovah.technokratis.com>
In-Reply-To: <200008180134.VAA21308@cordelia.lcs.mit.edu>

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 Hi,

 	Can you send me a `disassemble ether_output' from the debugger?
  I don't know what's at ether_ouput+0x30b. This would at least help locate
  the problem. This seems fairly wierd because you have many denied
  requests but zero calls to drain routines. Kind of odd, unless _all_ the
  denied requests are coming from interrupts (which is possible, but which
  needs to be tracked). Send me the disassemble output. ;-)

 Cheers,
 Bosko.

On Thu, 17 Aug 2000, Xiaowei Yang wrote:

> Hi,
> 
> Thanks a lot for the reply. I guess I sould phrase my question like
> this: I am doing some network simulation which requires a lot mbufs
> (for packet headers) but not mclusters. I want to allocate as much
> memory as possible. For example, I need about 1M mbufs. I am using
> right way to do this?  I am using FreeBSD 4.0-release. I set
> NMBCLUSTER to be 64000.
> 
> Here is 'netstat -m' output before the page fault happened:
> 
> 5948/256000/256000 mbufs in use (current/peak/max):
>         5942 mbufs allocated to data
>         6 mbufs allocated to packet headers
> 178/302/64000 mbuf clusters in use (current/peak/max)
> 32604 Kbytes allocated to network (3% in use)
> 102535 requests for memory denied
> 0 requests for memory delayed
> 0 calls to protocol drain routines
> 
> Here is the trace:
> 
>      ether_output+0x30b
>      ip_output+0x5cb
>      ip_stripoptions+0x1e8
>      ip_input+0x46a
>      ip_input+0x69f
>      doreti_popl_fs_fault+0x95
>      Xintr11+0x65
> 
> 
> I tried a larger value for NMBCLUSTER , which is 262144, but the
> kernel stopped booting with page fault. (I heard that the size of mbuf
> is 256 in 4.x. But I still see MSIZE is set to 128 in
> sys/i386/include/param.h, which I donot understand.)
> 
> Thanks,
> 
> 
> >  
> >  Hi,
> > 
> > 	I'm afraid you'll need to provide much more information concerning
> >   the page fault, if you expect someone to be able to help you.
> >   	In particular, the following is the necessary minimum:
> > 
> > 	* FreeBSD version you're doing this with.
> > 	* Is this reproducable? If so, what is the exact procedure?
> > 	* Stack trace, as well as other available debugging information
> > 	following the page fault.
> > 
> > 	With the information you have presently provided, it may not even be
> >   the relevant code that is causing this fault. It could just be triggering
> >   a problem that occurs only when kmem_map is mostly occupied by the mb_map
> >   submap, and the size of the kmem_map (or its parent, kernel_map), may
> >   need to be increased.
> > 
> >  Bosko
> >  bmilekic@dsuper.net
> > 
> > On Thu, 17 Aug 2000, Xiaowei Yang wrote:
> > 
> > > Greetings, everyone,
> > > 
> > > I am doing some simulation that needs to allocate as many nmbufs as
> > > possible. I could not figure out how to set nmbufs to be the maximum
> > > value allowd by my physical memory. I tired to mannual set it to be a
> > > huge number, for example, 128MB/128B=1M (I have 196M memory) and used
> > > netstat -m to monitor the real allocated nmbufs. However, when it
> > > reached some value lower that a 1M, a kernel page fault happened.
> > > 
> > > It seems to me I also need to increase the maximum kernel memory size
> > > seperately. Can someone tell me how to do it right? Is there a simple
> > > formula to estimate the number?
> > > 
> > > 
> > > Thanks,
> > > 
> > > Xiaowei
> > > 
> > 
> 
> 
> 	Cheers,
> 	--Xiaowei
> 
> 


--
 Bosko Milekic  *  Voice/Mobile: 514.865.7738  *  Pager: 514.921.0237
    bmilekic@technokratis.com  *  http://www.technokratis.com/




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