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I'm finding that on occasion my Linux box runs out of memory and it starts tearing down random processes to deal with it.

I'm curious what administrators do to avoid this? Is the only real solution to up the amount of memory (will upping the swap alone help?), or is there better ways to set up the box with software to avoid this? (i.e., quotas, or some such?).

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8 Answers 8

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By default Linux has a somewhat brain-damaged concept of memory management: it lets you allocate more memory than your system has, then randomly terminates a process when it gets in trouble. (The actual semantics of what gets killed are more complex than that - Google "Linux OOM Killer" for lots of details and arguments about whether it's a good or bad thing).


To restore some semblance of sanity to your memory management:

  1. Disable the OOM Killer (Put vm.oom-kill = 0 in /etc/sysctl.conf)
  2. Disable memory overcommit (Put vm.overcommit_memory = 2 in /etc/sysctl.conf)
    Note that this is a trinary value: 0 = "estimate if we have enough RAM", 1 = "Always say yes", 2 = "say no if we don't have the memory")

These settings will make Linux behave in the traditional way (if a process requests more memory than is available malloc() will fail and the process requesting the memory is expected to cope with that failure).

Reboot your machine to make it reload /etc/sysctl.conf, or use the proc file system to enable right away, without reboot:

echo 2 > /proc/sys/vm/overcommit_memory 
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    It's not Linux thats braindamaged, but the programmers that allocate the memory, never to use it. Java VMs are notorious with this. I, as an admin who manages servers runing Java apps wouldn't survive one second without overcommit. May 14, 2010 at 20:37
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    Java programmers don't allocate unused memory, there is no malloc in java. I think you are confusing this with JVM settings like -Xms. In any case, increasing virtual memory size by adding swap space is a much safer solution than overcommiting.
    – jlliagre
    May 14, 2010 at 21:50
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    Note that this solution won't stop your system from running out of memory or killing processes. It will only revert you to traditional Unix behaviour, where if one process eats all your memory the next one that tries to malloc will not get any (and most likely crash). If you are unlucky that next process is init (or something else that is critical), which the OOM Killer generally avoids.
    – pehrs
    May 14, 2010 at 22:30
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    jlliagre, i said Java VMs (Virtual Machines), not Java programs, although from an admin perspective it is the same :) May 15, 2010 at 8:32
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    Perhaps worth mentioning here that adding the above to /etc/sysctl.conf will likely only take effect on the next reboot; if you want to make changes now you should use the sysctl command with root permissions e.g. sudo sysctl vm.overcommit_memory=2
    – nickgrim
    Nov 15, 2012 at 20:22
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You can disable overcommit, see http://www.mjmwired.net/kernel/Documentation/sysctl/vm.txt#514

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    An answer should be more than just a link to some lengthy linux kernel documentation file. -1 Apr 11, 2017 at 6:14
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The short answer, for a server, is buy and install more RAM.

A server that routinely enough experienced OOM (Out-Of-Memory) errors, then besides the VM (virtual memory) manager's overcommit sysctl option in Linux kernels, this is not a good thing.

Upping the amount of swap (virtual memory that has been paged out to disk by the kernel's memory manager) will help if the current values are low, and the usage involves many tasks each such large amounts of memory, rather than a one or a few processes each requesting a huge amount of the total virtual memory available (RAM + swap).

For many applications allocating more than two time (2x) the amount of RAM as swap provides diminishing return on improvement. In some large computational simulations, this may be acceptable if the speed slow-down is bearable.

With RAM (ECC or not) be quite affordable for modest quantities, e.g. 4-16 GB, I have to admit, I haven't experienced this problem myself in a long time.

The basics at looking at the memory consumption including using free and top, sorted by memory usage, as the two most common quick evaluations of memory usage patterns. So be sure you understand the meaning of each field in the output of those commands at the very least.

With no specifics of applications (e.g. database, network service server, real-time video processing) and the server's usage (few power users, 100-1000s of user/client connections), I cannot think of any general recommendations in regards to dealing with the OOM problem.

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  • This is bad advice. Some programs (Java,gunicorn) by default will decide how much RAM they think they can grab when they are started. So its quite possible that you will NEVER have enough memory to avoid OOM. Unless you know that the system is short on RAM, th first step is to set overcommit_memory to 2, then reduce the overcommit_ratio.
    – symcbean
    May 2, 2023 at 14:39
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You can use ulimit to reduce the amount of memory a process is allowed to claim before it's killed. It's very usefull if your problem is one or a few run away processes that crashes your server.

If your problem is that you simply don't have enough memory to run the services you need there are only three solutions:

  1. Reduce the memory used by your services by limiting caches and similar

  2. Create a larger swap area. It will cost you in performance, but can buy you some time.

  3. Buy more memory

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  • Perfectly explained.
    – cherouvim
    Jun 13, 2020 at 14:59
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Increasing the amount of physical memory may not be an effective response in all circumstances.

One way to check this is the 'atop' command. Particularly these two lines.

This is out server when it was healthy:

MEM | tot   23.7G | free   10.0G | cache   3.9G | buff  185.4M | slab  207.8M |
SWP | tot    5.7G | free    5.7G |              | vmcom  28.1G | vmlim  27.0G |

When it was running poorly (and before we adjusted overcommit_memory from 50 to 90, we would see behavior with vmcom running well over 50G, oom-killer blowing up processes every few seconds, and the load kept radically bouncing due to NFSd child processes getting blown up and re-created continually.

We've recently duplicated cases where multi-user Linux terminal servers massively over-commit the virtual memory allocation but very few of the requested pages are actually consumed.

While it's not advised to follow this exact route, we adjusted overcommit-memory from the default 50 to 90 which alleviated some of the problem. We did end up having to move all the users to another terminal server and restart to see the full benefit.

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Despite a lot of answers here - the best you can do as an administrator is to investigate everything in oom killer report(s) and clearly understand why it triggers. Then that should give you a clue about next steps. It may be related to OS config or maybe a problem with particular piece of software.

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I had similar issue related to this bug and solution was to use older / newer (fixed) kernel.

However at the time I could not reboot my machine so some kind of ugly workaround was to login as root and clear system caches with this command:

echo 3 > /proc/sys/vm/drop_caches
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@voretaq7 linux doesn't has brain-damaged concept of memory management, by default vm.overcommit_ratio is 0,

0       -   Heuristic overcommit handling. Obvious overcommits of
            address space are refused. Used for a typical system. It
            ensures a seriously wild allocation fails while allowing
            overcommit to reduce swap usage.  root is allowed to
            allocate slightly more memory in this mode. This is the
            default.

In this way, if you have 4GB of ram and you try to allocate 4.2 GB with malloc of virtual memory, your allocation will fail.

With vm.overcommit_ratio = 1

            1    -   Always overcommit. Appropriate for some scientific
            applications. Classic example is code using sparse arrays
            and just relying on the virtual memory consisting almost
            entirely of zero pages.

With vm.overcommit_ratio = 2

           2    -   Don't overcommit. The total address space commit
            for the system is not permitted to exceed swap + a
            configurable percentage (default is 50) of physical RAM.
            Depending on the percentage you use, in most situations
            this means a process will not be killed while accessing
            pages but will receive errors on memory allocation as
            appropriate.

            Useful for applications that want to guarantee their
            memory allocations will be available in the future
            without having to initialize every page.

So by default linux doesn't overcommit, if your application more memory then you have, maybe your code is buggy

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    You have contradicted yourself here. At the top you say "by default vm.overcommit_ratio is 0" and then at the bottom you say "by default linux doesn't overcommit". If the latter were true, vm.overcommit_ratio would be 2 by default! Dec 10, 2013 at 18:35
  • vm.overcommit_ratio = 0, malloc doesn't alloc more memory than your physical ram, so for me that means don't overcommit, overcommit is when you can allocate more virtual than your physical ram
    – c4f4t0r
    Dec 10, 2013 at 19:54
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    Yes, you have misunderstood. Dec 10, 2013 at 20:12
  • you misunderstood, the default 0, doesn't allocate to allocate more virtual memory than ram and 2 doesn't go over allow vm.overcommit_ratio + swap space, so if i misunderstood tell me what
    – c4f4t0r
    Dec 10, 2013 at 20:21
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    Of course. "Obvious overcommits" are refused. The rest passes. You need to read more carefully. Dec 10, 2013 at 20:45

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