Difference between revisions of "Manipulating swap space on a running Solaris system"
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This will of course change the size of swap to 4Gb. On reboot it will become available. | This will of course change the size of swap to 4Gb. On reboot it will become available. | ||
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+ | To get rid of the extra swap space you've create: | ||
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+ | zfs destroy rpool/swap2 |
Latest revision as of 00:58, 17 May 2011
Contents
Listing swap files in use
The following command will list all active swap files:
swap -l
with output looking like this:
swapfile dev swaplo blocks free /dev/md/dsk/d10 85,10 16 8389632 8389632
Adding swap space
So you need more swap temporarily. Here's how:
1. Make a file to add to swap
mkfile 2g /export/tempfile
This will crate a 2Gb file.
2. Add the file to the swap pool
swap -a /export/tempfile
then check it worked with
swap -l swapfile dev swaplo blocks free /dev/md/dsk/d10 85,10 16 8389632 8389632 /export/tempfile - 16 6291440 6291440
Delete a swap file
Finished with your temporary swap file. Delete it:
swap -d /export/tempfile
Adding Swap space to a system with ZFS root pool
So the system you're running is using as ZFS based root pool to boot. In order to add swap space above what the system was built with you will need to first create a new ZFS pool and then add it to swap:
1. Create a new ZFS pool
zfs create -V 2G rpool/swap2
2. Add the file associated with the new pool to the running swap space
swap -a /dev/zvol/dsk/rpool/swap2
As per usual the added swap space will disappear after a reboot, but you'll have to manually delete the new ZFS pool you've created.
If you want to make a permanent change to the size of swap, you can do the following:
zfs set volsize=4G rpool/swap
This will of course change the size of swap to 4Gb. On reboot it will become available.
To get rid of the extra swap space you've create:
zfs destroy rpool/swap2