Continuously increasing memory usage since the update to 2.6
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Yes, it can create a lot of filterdns processes. Especially if some things are failing to resolve.
Check the Resolver logs for errors. Prune any old entries that no longer resolve if you can. -
@stephenw10
I see no resolver errors
Everything is resolvable.How does that resolverstuff work ?
Is it a timed job that spawns a resolver for every entry ?Is it run every 10 min ?
/Bingo
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Well to reply (to my self) on how to list the filterdns
processesthreads (process number is the same)jimp gave a hint here
https://redmine.pfsense.org/issues/8758Use
ps uxHaww | grep filterdns
root 62928 0.0 0.2 82100 14760 - Is Wed16 0:00.00 /usr/local/sbin/filterdns -p /var/run/filterdns.pid -i 300 -c /var/etc/filterdns.conf -d 1 root 62928 0.0 0.2 82100 14760 - Is Wed16 0:00.00 /usr/local/sbin/filterdns -p /var/run/filterdns.pid -i 300 -c /var/etc/filterdns.conf -d 1 root 62928 0.0 0.2 82100 14760 - Is Wed16 0:00.00 /usr/local/sbin/filterdns -p /var/run/filterdns.pid -i 300 -c /var/etc/filterdns.conf -d 1 root 62928 0.0 0.2 82100 14760 - Is Wed16 0:00.00 /usr/local/sbin/filterdns -p /var/run/filterdns.pid -i 300 -c /var/etc/filterdns.conf -d 1 root 62928 0.0 0.2 82100 14760 - Is Wed16 0:00.00 /usr/local/sbin/filterdns -p /var/run/filterdns.pid -i 300 -c /var/etc/filterdns.conf -d 1 root 62928 0.0 0.2 82100 14760 - Is Wed16 0:00.00 /usr/local/sbin/filterdns -p /var/run/filterdns.pid -i 300 -c /var/etc/filterdns.conf -d 1 root 62928 0.0 0.2 82100 14760 - Is Wed16 0:00.00 /usr/local/sbin/filterdns -p /var/run/filterdns.pid -i 300 -c /var/etc/filterdns.conf -d 1 [22.01-RELEASE][admin@..]/root: ps uxHaww | grep filterdns | wc 132 2501 20780
Sending the output to wc shows 132 line matches , that seems to be in (Is) "Idle state"
The file : /var/etc/filterdns.conf seems to contain my DNS resolvable aliases , and i have 66 of these.
[22.01-RELEASE][admin@..../root: cat /var/etc/filterdns.conf | wc 66 198 2832
Strange that the # of filterdns
processesthreads are excactly the double of the DNS entries in /var/etc/filterdns.conf
But i suppose there is a tech (OS) reason for that , since it's excactly double, and i just don't know enough of the inner work.Now to find out how Netgate gets the "filterdns" DNS name shown in the Diagnostics --> System Activity
ps uxHaww | grep filterdns
Doesn't show the DNS name to be resolved.
@jimp - Any hint here ?62928 root 20 0 80M 14M uwait 0 0:00 0.00% /usr/local/sbin/filterdns -p /var/run/filterdns.pid -i 300 -c /var/etc/filterdns.conf -d 1{bigdata.adsunflower} 62928 root 20 0 80M 14M uwait 2 0:00 0.00% /usr/local/sbin/filterdns -p /var/run/filterdns.pid -i 300 -c /var/etc/filterdns.conf -d 1{choice.microsoft.co}
Well beside the filterdns
processesthreads being the double # of the /var/etc/filterdns.conf entries , I see no increase inprocessesthreads etc. So my guess is that the filterdns stuff is behaving as expected , and not causing memory growth , unless you add more entries to resolve./Bingo
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That output is from
top -aSH
you should be able to see them there. Though you are limited by the terminal size.Steve
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Greetings,
I ran our test systems for a while and it seems that the RAM has settled at around 90%. This is not optimal, as we cannot use our monitoring effectively with such high values.
So far, I have not been able to detect any failure due to the increase in RAM consumption.
I have now deployed a test system with 2 GB RAM to see whether the RAM increase settles back at 90% or whether it remains at around 50%. After the deployment, the RAM on the test system is at 26%. I would provide feedback if I have any further information on this.
In the meantime, do you have any other ideas about the reason for the continuous increase in RAM?
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Still no obvious process with increasing usage?
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Not that i can see, here is the same system output side by side:
System as posted before:
top:
Before:
Today:
All I see is an increase in the "wired" memory
htop:
Before:
Today:
telegraf needs even less RAM than in the last analysis, I suspect that telegraf did just not compiled any data at this point.
Therefore, I do not see any really meaningful indications as to why the RAM is rising.
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What does that usage look like in the pfSense monitoring graphs?
On my own 22.01 system I see wired use increase but that's not necessarily a problem. The is no need for the kernel to release RAM until the available free ram becomes too low for the requests using it.
Steve
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@Techniker_ctr
@stephenw10 said in Continuously increasing memory usage since the update to 2.6:On my own 22.01 system I see wired use increase but that's not necessarily a problem. The is no need for the kernel to release RAM until the available free ram becomes too low for the requests using it.
Is it possible that this is a discussion of an old missunderstanding of memory usage in unix systems?
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Well kinda. But also what changed between 2.5.2 and 2.6.0 to cause the differing usage pattern. And is it a problem.
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Hey Steve thanks for your help,
here are the requested pfSense monitoring pages:
Here in a 3 month view:
The Day we applied the update is graphically very well visible.
Here in a 1 day view:
We also had our first outage today which was clearly due to the increased RAM levels:
May 6 08:31:54 xxxx:xxxx:xxxx:xxxx::xxxx 1 2022-05-06T08:31:54.435677+02:00 xxxxxxx.xxxxxxxxx.xx kernel - - - pid 7306 (unbound), jid 0, uid 59, was killed: out of swap space
Because of the error the systems behind the pfSense were without DNS resolution. Therefore it seems that the RAM is not released for new processes. The system is currently at 94% RAM usage according to our monitoring.
Any Suggestion?
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Not immediately. Let me see what I can find...
It's interesting that you have not exhausted free memory and the system appears to be releasing inactive memory once free hits 10% which is what I expect.
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a small addendum:
we just had a second system with the same failure.
<3>1 2022-05-06T14:57:46.424812+02:00 xxxxxx.xxxxxxxx.xx kernel - - - pid 52014 (unbound), jid 0, uid 59, was killed: out of swap space
Here is the output of the monitoring:
This is a fairly new system uptime 50 days. 03/17 was the deploy so the Data is a bit messy that day.
A rough pattern seems to be slowly emerging:
I am currently monitoring 11 (2.6) systems, following is the uptime along with RAM usage:VM1: 43 Days 90% (no failure yet)
VM2: 44 Days 90% (no failure yet)
VM3: 01 Days 26% (2GB RAM Testsystem)
VM4: 34 Days 94% (no failure yet)
VM5: 50 Days 93% (first failure)
VM6: 50 Days 93% (second failure)
VM7: 20 Days 61%
VM8: 22 Days 66%
VM9: 22 Days 65%
VM10: 25 days 68%
VM11: 43 Days 89%VM4 stands out a bit, but there is also a bit more going on than with the others, but it seems that at 50 days the critical mass is reached.
Maybe this information will help with your investigations, if you need more information just ask.
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And they are all configured the same; 1G RAM, VMs in Hyper-V?
Same package loads?
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yes that is correct. Some have 1 or 2 IPsec-Tunnels or ovpn setups. But the fundation is the same
2 Core CPU
1 GB RAM
5 GB SSD
Filesystem: ufs
HV: Hyper-VInstalled Packages:
Cron 0.3.7_5
openvpn-client-export 1.6_4
sudo 0.3_6
Telegraf net-0.9_6except VM3, which is a new test system with 2 GB RAM
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We just had another failure on VM1 due to the RAM usage:
There were error(s) loading the rules: /tmp/rules.debug:19: cannot define table bogonsv6: Cannot allocate memory - The line in question reads [19]: table <bogonsv6> persist file "/etc/bogonsv6"
@ 2022-05-10 16:06:25 -
Can you post the output of
vmstat -z
, ideally on a machine that's using most of its memory? If there's a memory leak in the kernel there may be some indication of it there. -
Following the output on VM1
ITEM SIZE LIMIT USED FREE REQ FAIL SLEEP UMA Kegs: 224, 0, 142, 11, 142, 0, 0 UMA Zones: 680, 0, 143, 2, 143, 0, 0 UMA Slabs: 80, 0, 18750, 450, 109008, 0, 0 UMA Hash: 256, 0, 9, 6, 14, 0, 0 4 Bucket: 32, 0, 27, 598, 1498399, 0, 0 6 Bucket: 48, 0, 7, 574, 863703, 0, 0 8 Bucket: 64, 0, 26, 780, 1263635, 19, 0 12 Bucket: 96, 0, 10, 277, 175069, 0, 0 16 Bucket: 128, 0, 54, 318, 53744, 1, 0 32 Bucket: 256, 0, 47, 148, 836378, 4, 0 64 Bucket: 512, 0, 56, 72, 1119551,81796, 0 128 Bucket: 1024, 0, 44, 24, 535362, 1, 0 256 Bucket: 2048, 0, 52, 10, 4815883, 19, 0 vmem: 1856, 0, 3, 1, 3, 0, 0 vmem btag: 56, 0, 867, 624, 1094, 11, 0 VM OBJECT: 256, 0, 3634, 2156,253463924, 0, 0 RADIX NODE: 144, 0, 8017, 5915,716370226, 0, 0 MAP: 240, 0, 3, 61, 3, 0, 0 KMAP ENTRY: 120, 0, 13, 86, 14, 0, 0 MAP ENTRY: 120, 0, 5241, 7035,2263377409, 0, 0 VMSPACE: 2560, 0, 57, 30,10984762, 0, 0 fakepg: 104, 0, 1, 151, 1, 0, 0 64 pcpu: 8, 0, 5073, 2095, 34172, 0, 0 mt_stats_zone: 64, 0, 500, 76, 500, 0, 0 mt_zone: 24, 0, 500, 335, 500, 0, 0 16: 16, 0, 1938, 823,78830492, 0, 0 32: 32, 0, 2455, 1045,54857778, 0, 0 64: 64, 0, 491731, 301,109581451, 0, 0 128: 128, 0, 1962118, 182,96462269, 0, 0 256: 256, 0, 489866, 79,77600913, 0, 0 512: 512, 0, 426, 198,11174057, 0, 0 1024: 1024, 0, 1612, 44,11834906, 0, 0 2048: 2048, 0, 295, 79,10466901, 0, 0 4096: 4096, 0, 17438, 13,14626646, 0, 0 8192: 8192, 0, 30, 2, 308457, 0, 0 16384: 16384, 0, 19, 2, 408909, 0, 0 32768: 32768, 0, 6, 0, 263, 0, 0 65536: 65536, 0, 15, 2, 6915281, 0, 0 SLEEPQUEUE: 80, 0, 217, 62, 217, 0, 0 kenv: 258, 0, 3, 72, 3640, 0, 0 Files: 80, 0, 205, 395,143610016, 0, 0 filedesc0: 1104, 0, 82, 29,10984786, 0, 0 rangeset pctrie nodes: 144, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0 TURNSTILE: 136, 0, 217, 43, 217, 0, 0 rl_entry: 40, 0, 116, 384, 116, 0, 0 umtx pi: 96, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0 umtx_shm: 88, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0 PROC: 1328, 0, 81, 42,10984785, 0, 0 PGRP: 88, 0, 38, 412, 112692, 0, 0 THREAD: 1840, 0, 201, 15, 6198, 0, 0 cpuset: 104, 0, 11, 113, 11, 0, 0 domainset: 40, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0 audit_record: 1280, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0 mbuf_packet: 256, 383385, 0, 759,30556029, 0, 0 mbuf: 256, 383385, 8193, 768,263857330, 0, 0 mbuf_cluster: 2048, 59902, 759, 7, 150995, 0, 0 mbuf_jumbo_page: 4096, 29951, 0, 4, 55790, 0, 0 mbuf_jumbo_9k: 9216, 8874, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0 mbuf_jumbo_16k: 16384, 4991, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0 epoch_record pcpu: 256, 0, 4, 12, 4, 0, 0 NetGraph items: 72, 4123, 0, 279, 29063, 0, 0 NetGraph data items: 72, 4123, 0, 0, 1, 0, 0 DMAR_MAP_ENTRY: 120, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0 ttyinq: 160, 0, 180, 20, 375, 0, 0 ttyoutq: 256, 0, 95, 40, 198, 0, 0 FPU_save_area: 512, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0 g_bio: 376, 0, 0, 350,27462740, 0, 0 linux_dma_pctrie: 144, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0 linux_dma_object: 24, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0 cryptop: 128, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0 cryptodesc: 120, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0 crypto_session: 32, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0 vtnet_tx_hdr: 24, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0 VNODE: 480, 0, 2225, 71, 82458, 0, 0 VNODEPOLL: 120, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0 BUF TRIE: 144, 0, 563, 6268, 4618013, 0, 0 NAMEI: 1024, 0, 0, 40,212755708, 0, 0 rentr: 24, 0, 0, 0, 966, 0, 0 S VFS Cache: 108, 0, 2519, 316, 805596, 0, 0 STS VFS Cache: 148, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0 L VFS Cache: 328, 0, 20, 64, 24777, 0, 0 LTS VFS Cache: 368, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0 TMPFS dirent: 64, 0, 41, 393, 18729, 0, 0 TMPFS node: 232, 0, 42, 94, 18730, 0, 0 NCLNODE: 608, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0 DIRHASH: 1024, 0, 31, 17, 890, 0, 0 Mountpoints: 2744, 0, 4, 5, 10, 0, 0 AIO: 208, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0 AIOP: 32, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0 AIOCB: 752, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0 AIOLIO: 280, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0 pipe: 760, 0, 12, 43, 9800538, 0, 0 procdesc: 136, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0 ksiginfo: 112, 0, 107, 383, 4736160, 0, 0 itimer: 352, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0 ng_pipe: 64, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0 KNOTE: 160, 0, 30, 195,34096706, 0, 0 socket: 872, 30804, 80, 272, 1250903, 0, 0 IPsec SA lft_c: 16, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0 unpcb: 256, 30810, 42, 138, 431749, 0, 0 ipq: 56, 1917, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0 udp_inpcb: 488, 30808, 21, 91, 631572, 0, 0 udpcb: 32, 30875, 21, 604, 631572, 0, 0 tcp_inpcb: 488, 30808, 10, 62, 76559, 0, 0 tcpcb: 984, 30804, 10, 30, 76559, 0, 0 tcptw: 88, 6165, 0, 270, 21380, 0, 0 syncache: 168, 15364, 0, 138, 47481, 0, 0 hostcache: 96, 15375, 7, 34, 355, 0, 0 sackhole: 32, 0, 0, 375, 41, 0, 0 tfo: 4, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0 tfo_ccache_entries: 80, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0 tcpreass: 48, 3818, 0, 0, 26, 0, 0 tcp_log: 400, 5000000, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0 tcp_log_bucket: 144, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0 tcp_log_node: 120, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0 sctp_ep: 1280, 30804, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0 sctp_asoc: 2288, 40000, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0 sctp_laddr: 48, 80012, 0, 0, 19, 0, 0 sctp_raddr: 736, 80000, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0 sctp_chunk: 152, 400010, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0 sctp_readq: 152, 400010, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0 sctp_stream_msg_out: 112, 400015, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0 sctp_asconf: 40, 400000, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0 sctp_asconf_ack: 48, 400060, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0 udplite_inpcb: 488, 30808, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0 ripcb: 488, 30808, 5, 35, 29066, 0, 0 rtentry: 208, 0, 25, 70, 33, 0, 0 pf mtags: 48, 0, 0, 830,76849844, 0, 0 pf tags: 104, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0 pf states: 320, 96000, 57, 135, 2129745, 0, 0 pf state keys: 88, 0, 57, 438, 2129745, 0, 0 pf source nodes: 136, 96019, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0 pf table entry counters: 64, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0 pf table entries: 160, 400000, 132853, 12297, 785608, 6, 0 pf frags: 256, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0 pf frag entries: 40, 5000, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0 pf state scrubs: 40, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0 bridge_rtnode: 88, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0 selfd: 64, 0, 158, 772,137686944, 0, 0 swpctrie: 144, 119853, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0 swblk: 136, 119828, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0 FFS inode: 160, 0, 2129, 196, 63670, 0, 0 FFS1 dinode: 128, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0 FFS2 dinode: 256, 0, 2129, 136, 63670, 0, 0
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@techniker_ctr said in Continuously increasing memory usage since the update to 2.6:
128: 128, 0, 1962118, 182,96462269, 0, 0
It looks like the '128' zone is the most likely culprit. Rather unhelpfully that's a generic zone used by the in-kernel 'malloc()' call.
Let's confirm that that's the problem first. Can you keep an eye on the vmstat output for a few hours to see if the used number (currently at 1962118) increases roughly in line with the growing memory use you see?
(Napkin math: we've got 1962118 allocations of 128 bytes, so about 240 MB. That seems to be about right for what we're looking for.)
Once that's confirmed the following running Dtrace script on the router may provide clues:
#!/usr/bin/env -S /usr/sbin/dtrace -x nolibs -s struct uma_zone { uint32_t *mtx; char *uz_name; }; fbt:kernel:uma_zalloc_arg:entry / ((struct uma_zone *)arg0)->uz_name == "128" / { @num[stack()] = count(); }
Let that run for a few minutes and then terminate it with Ctrl+C. It'll likely produce a large amount of output, but with any luck the top user will give us a clue as to where that memory is going.