Difference between revisions of "Sar -r (memory)"
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↑ https://unix.stackexchange.com/questions/87908/how-do-you-empty-the-buffers-and-cache-on-a-linux-system
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− | <code>sar -r --human</code> | + | <code>[[sar]] -r --human</code> |
<pre> | <pre> | ||
09:38:01 PM kbmemfree kbavail kbmemused %memused kbbuffers kbcached kbcommit %commit kbactive kbinact kbdirty | 09:38:01 PM kbmemfree kbavail kbmemused %memused kbbuffers kbcached kbcommit %commit kbactive kbinact kbdirty |
Revision as of 07:23, 7 January 2020
sar -r --human
09:38:01 PM kbmemfree kbavail kbmemused %memused kbbuffers kbcached kbcommit %commit kbactive kbinact kbdirty 09:39:01 PM 122.1G 478.5G 381.5G 75.8% 385.4M 348.8G 25.4G 5.0% 39.7G 330.0G 96.2M 09:40:01 PM 118.7G 478.5G 384.9G 76.4% 385.5M 352.1G 25.4G 5.0% 39.8G 333.2G 406.1M 09:41:01 PM 116.1G 478.4G 387.4G 76.9% 385.6M 354.6G 25.4G 5.0% 39.9G 335.7G 259.2M
Activities
- Emptying the buffers cache:
free -h && sync && echo 3 > /proc/sys/vm/drop_caches && free -h
[1] - Use
fio
withdirect=0
to fill up your cache.
See also
- Swap,
swapon
,swapoff
,mkswap
,swaplabel
,free
,sar -r
,sar -S
,sar -W
,vmstat
,vm.swappiness
,/proc/swaps
,/etc/fstab
, Add a swap disk,systemd.swap
systemd-cgtop
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