Good trick to know on getting the pictures via the bcc. How many CPUs
does this box have?
In a scenario like this, I'd run a query to find out which jobs (in which
Domino subsystems) are causing the majority of the faulting. Then I'd
move the offending Domino server(s) to its own memory pool and leave the
rest in *BASE. This will allow you to control memory allocation to the
server(s) in most demand of memory while lessening the impact of the high
faulting rates on the other servers.
Kim
--------
President
Kim Greene Consulting, Inc.
iSeries Domino consulting, education, and performance
www.kimgreene.com
www.bleedyellow.com/blogs/dominodiva
twitter.com/iseriesdomino
(507) 367-2888
From: rob@xxxxxxxxx
To: Lotus Domino on the iSeries / AS400 <domino400@xxxxxxxxxxxx>
Date: 07/25/2011 12:34 PM
Subject: Re: Memory usage for Domino
Sent by: domino400-bounces+kim=kimgreene.com@xxxxxxxxxxxx
Pretty pictures get chopped by the list. I normally BCC someone so they
can see the pictures but others can learn from the rest of the thread.
The online one (which will show more short term spikes) goes off the
10,000 chart.
Fig 1 of 3
When I limit this down to 1000 I see that the median line is around 600.
Graph history is more level with less spikes:
Fig 2 of 3
This last one concentrates more on the averages
Fig 3 of 3
I'd say the median here is around 500.
Rob Berendt
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