Is there a way I can find out exact memory consumption by a PIPE opened by my process. I can run svmon with the pid on AIX and tried to map the segment with the PIPE utilization, but so far I am unable to, as the size of memory - which I think should match to PIPE utilization [from my svmon o/p corresponding to the process] - doesn't match to the maximum buffer size of a PIPE. Is there any way to check that?
-
can you post the code you use, as far as I can see calling pipe() is creating kernel objects, not userspace objects so It may be impossible to see any increases in the process memory use.– JasenDec 25, 2014 at 6:19
-
The capacity of a pipe is usually pretty small (classically, it was just 5 KiB, but it may be a bit larger now; POSIX only mandates 4 KiB as the minimum acceptable capacity). So the memory cost is normally barely noticeable.– Jonathan LefflerDec 25, 2014 at 7:08
-
Hi Jonathan, my idea was a PIPE can potentially grow until PIPE_BUF [limits.h] is reached, considering no reader is started. This value varies from system to system, for example in my AIX system it is - PIPE_BUF 32768. Upto this far it is pretty simple as I guess. Now consider I am opening a 42mb file and pushing 1024 bytes with each write to pipe, it will write at max 32KB as long as read process is not initiated [You can put a sleep of 30 sec in read process]. As soon as the read happens again write starts and continues as long as the BUF is not reached.– Soumya DasDec 25, 2014 at 7:44
-
This I can produce each time. But my question was if there is any way I can map this 32KB memory space in svmon output for the process. So far I am not successful.– Soumya DasDec 25, 2014 at 7:46
-
in the kernel, there is usually a limited number of pipes allowed at any one time and the kernel pipe buffers are pre-allocated. So opening a pipe makes no difference in the kernel size.– user3629249Dec 25, 2014 at 11:12
|
Show 1 more comment