• Subject: Re: Temporary Addresses - What causes them to be used up?
  • From: theis_richard@xxxxxxxxxx
  • Date: Wed, 19 Jan 2000 17:42:25 +0100



> > As you create and delete any object on the system, this will consume an
 > > address.  You have 2 to the 48th power temporary addresses on a CISC
 > > system.  If you *NEVER want to IPL, go to RISC, which has 2 to the 64th
 > > power.
You don't have so much virtual addresses, as they are not allocated on a byte
per byte basis, but in bunches (64K or 16M), depending of the use.  The system
is consuming many temporary addresses for its own work.
I suspect the V4R4 to be able to allocate 1 TB with only one virtual address
for the so-called UNIX teraspace, but I'm not sure...

> It's my contention that (at the current rate that we use our systems) that
> you never have to IPL a RISC AS/400, except for operations that require an
> IPL (PTFs, new releases, upgrades, etc.).
That's true, the RISC system has so many addresses, they don't need to be
reused:
look at the WRKSYSSTS, the temporary address percentage will increase for the
life
of the machine, with or without IPL, even thru releases.

Richard THEIS
  AS/400 Education, France
    theis_richard@fr.ibm.com


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