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Chapter 1 Overview of Solaris System TuningThis section provides overview information about the format of the tuning information in this manual. It also describes the different ways to tune a Solaris system. What's New in Solaris System Tuning?The following table lists important new tunable parameters or changes in the Solaris 9 release.
The following parameters are new or changed but might not be identified as changed in this book's appendices. For more information, see the specific parameter information in the main topic chapter:
Tuning a Solaris SystemSolaris is a multi-threaded, scalable UNIX® operating environment running on SPARC and Intel processors. It is self-adjusting to system load and demands minimal tuning. In some cases, however, tuning is necessary. This guide provides details about the officially supported kernel tuning options available for the Solaris environment. The Solaris kernel is composed of a core portion, which is always loaded, and a number of loadable modules that are loaded as references are made to them. Many of the variables referred to in the kernel portion of this guide are in the core portion, but a few are located in loadable modules. A key consideration in system tuning is that setting various system variables is often the least effective thing that can be done to improve performance. Changing the behavior of the application is generally the most effective tuning aid available. Adding more physical memory and balancing disk I/O patterns are also useful. In a few rare cases, changing one of the variables described in this guide will have a substantial effect on system performance. Another thing to remember is that one system's /etc/system settings might not be applicable, either wholly or in part, to another environment. Carefully consider the values in the file with respect to the environment in which they will be applied. Make sure that you understand the behavior of a system before attempting to apply changes to the system variables described here. The variables described here and their meanings can and do change from release to release. A release is either a Solaris Update release or a new version such as Solaris 9. Publication of these variables and their description does not preclude changes to the variables and descriptions without notice. Tuning FormatThe format for the description of each variable follows:
Tuning the Solaris KernelThe table below describes the different ways tuning parameters can be applied.
/etc/system FileThe /etc/system file provides a static mechanism for adjusting the values of kernel variables. Values specified in this file are read at boot time and are applied. Any changes made to the file are not applied to the operating system until the system is rebooted. Prior to the Solaris 8 release, /etc/system entries that set the values of system variables were applied in two phases:
The second phase sometimes caused confusion to users and administrators by setting variables to values that seem to be impermissible or assigning values to variables (for example, max_nprocs) that have a value overridden during the initial configuration. In the Solaris 8 release, one pass is made to set all the values before the configuration parameters are calculated. Example—Setting a Parameter in /etc/systemThe following /etc/system entry sets the number of read-ahead blocks that are read for file systems mounted using NFS version 2 software.
Recovering From an Incorrect ValueMake a copy of /etc/system before modifying it so you can easily recover from incorrect value:
If a value entered in /etc/system causes the system to become unbootable, you can recover with the following command:
This command causes the system to ask for the name of various files used in the boot process. Press the carriage return to accept the default values until the name of the /etc/system file is requested. When the Name of system file [/etc/system]: prompt is displayed, enter the name of the good /etc/system file or /dev/null:
If /dev/null is entered, this path causes the system to attempt to read from /dev/null for its configuration information and because it is empty, the system uses the default values. After the system is booted, the /etc/system file can be corrected. For more information on system recovery, see System Administration Guide: Basic Administration. kadbkadb is a bootable kernel debugger with the same general syntax as adb. For the exceptions, see kadb(1M). One advantage of kadb is that the user can set breakpoints and when the breakpoint is reached, examine data or step through the execution of kernel code. If the system is booted with the kadb -d command, values for variables in the core kernel can be set, but values for loadable modules would have to be set when the module was actually loaded. For a brief tutorial on using the kadb command, see “Debugging” in Writing Device Drivers. mdbStarting with the Solaris 8 release is the modular debugger, mdb(1), which is unique among available Solaris debuggers because it is easily extensible. A programming API is available that allows compilation of modules to perform desired tasks within the context of the debugger. mdb also includes a number of desirable usability features including command-line editing, command history, built-in output pager, syntax checking, and command pipelining. This is the recommended post-mortem debugger for the kernel. Example—Using mdb to Change a ValueTo change the value of the integer variable maxusers from 5 to 6, do the following:
Replace maxusers with the actual address of the item to be changed as well as the value the variable is to be set to. For more information on using the modular debugger, see the Solaris Modular Debugger Guide. When using kadb or mdb, the module name prefix is not required because after a module is loaded, its symbols form a common name space with the core kernel symbols and any other previously loaded module symbols. For example, ufs:ufs_WRITES would be accessed as ufs_WRITES in each of the debuggers (assuming the UFS module is loaded), but would require the ufs: prefix when set in the /etc/system file. Including the module name prefix kadb results in an undefined symbol message. Special StructuresSolaris tuning variables come in a variety of forms. The tune structure defined in /usr/include/sys/tuneable.h is the runtime representation of tune_t_gpgslo, tune_t_fsflushr, tune_t_minarmem, tune_t_minasmem, and tune_t_flkrec. After the kernel is initialized, all references to values of these variables are found in the appropriate field of the tune structure. Various documents (for example, previous versions of Solaris System Administration Guide, Volume 2) have stated that the proper way to set variables in the tune structure is to use the syntax, tune:field-name where field name is replaced by the actual variable name listed above. This process silently fails. The proper way to set variables for this structure at boot time is to initialize the special variable corresponding to the desired field name. The system initialization process then loads these values into the tune structure. A second structure into which various tuning parameters are placed is the var structure named v. You can find the definition of a var struct in the /usr/include/sys/var.h file. The runtime representation of variables such as autoup and bufhwm is stored here. Do not change either the tune or v structure on a running system. Changing any of the fields of these structures on a running system might cause the system to panic. Viewing System Configuration InformationSeveral tools are available to examine system configuration. Some require root privilege, others can be run by a non-privileged user. Every structure and data item can be examined with the kernel debugger by using mdb on a running system or by booting under kadb. sysdefThe sysdef(1M) command provides the values of System V IPC settings, STREAMS tunables, process resource limits, and portions of the tune and v structures. For example, the sysdef “Tunable Parameters” section from on a 512 Mbyte UltraTM 80 system is:
kstatskstats are data structures maintained by various kernel subsystems and drivers. They provide a mechanism for exporting data from the kernel to user programs without requiring that the program read kernel memory or have root privilege. For more information, see kstat(3KSTAT). Starting in the Solaris 8 release, the kstat(1M) command is available to enable selection and display of kstats with a command-line interface. A Perl module, kstat.3ext, is also available to process kstat information. Note – kstats with system_pages name in the unix module do not report statistics for cachefree because cachefree is not supported in the Solaris 9 release. |
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