On Sat, Dec 22, 2007 at 01:00:09PM -0800, Linus Torvalds wrote:I don't agree with you Linus. I'm one of those used to quickly take a look at its contents when I don't know where all my memory has gone. I know by experience that if I find 6-digit values in dentry_cache or inode_cache, all I was looking for is there, and that's enough for a quick diag. It doesn't give anything accurate, but it's very useful to quickly diag out some problems on production systems. It was this week that I noticed for the first time that slabinfo did not exist anymore, and did not know what replaced it. Lacking time, I finally gave up and *supposed* that the memory was eaten by the usual suspects. I can understand that it has to go away for technical reasons, but Ted is right, please don't believe that nobody uses it just because you got no complaint. While people are not likely to perform all computations in scripts, at least they're used to find some quickly identifiable patterns there. Willy --
| Greg Kroah-Hartman | [PATCH 011/196] sysfs: Fix a copy-n-paste typo in comment |
| Al Boldi | Re: [ck] Re: [ANNOUNCE] RSDL completely fair starvation free interactive cpu sched... |
| Andrew Morton | 2.6.25-rc8-mm2 |
| Ingo Molnar | Re: [patch] sched_clock(): cleanups |
| David Miller | [GIT]: Networking |
| John P Poet | Realtek 8111C transmit timed out |
| Gerrit Renker | [PATCH 15/37] dccp: Set per-connection CCIDs via socket options |
| Kenny Chang | Multicast packet loss |
git: | |
