Shrinkage!!!
So I've got a dirt cheap Black Friday VPS for a few years. Specs when purchased were 896MB ram.
After a year or so the ram being reported changed to 854MB but control panel still reported it was 896MB. A couple months later I opened a ticket - ticket was closed and a response from the provider seemed to indicate to me they were not happy about something - am guessing they were having a bad day.
A month or two ago the RAM dropped again now it's 837MB. The website I hosted on that site was having problems- sometimes MariaDB would crash from memory error, sometimes other things would crash and website would be offline for a couple days before I noticed. I ended up moving the site to a (cough cough) PlumFather VPS I use for backups, it's been running fine. It is just a hobby site at this point.
Question is this:
When purchased the VPS correctly reported 896MB, why might it drop to 856MB after a year or so and then drop again to 838MB? I do know that it's normal for the amount of "purchased" memory to differ from what your VPS will report. For example I have a 2GB RAM VPS and it reports 1.92GB.
What's correct and how are the reported RAM numbers being calculated?
Not going to name them or contact the provider about this again because they have been very generous to me, so in that respect this issue is trivial. Probably just won't renew this for another year come BF. But am curious about what's most likely going on with the RAM.
Perhaps :
?
Comments
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Ah, yes, that is very normal. Servers try to optimize the resources, so if the server feels that you are not using the full RAM allocated, they tend to reduce it so you only have what you need. That way others who need more RAM can get it
Btw, you forgot to name and shame the provider
Websites have ads, I have ad-blocker.
Thanks FrankZ.
OS is Debian 11. Tried the command:
dmesg | Reserving
- there is no output.cat /proc/cmdline
returnsBOOT_IMAGE=/boot/vmlinuz-5.10.0-23-amd64 root=UUID=0aa4a5a9-990e-48f0-9ec5-afc98
So with my limited knowledge appears crashkernel is not the issue here.
In this case it would be like shaming someone who declines to fix the bad brakes on your old car but gives you a new car for free
Try booting with
iommu=off
Has it always been 11 or was it originally 9 then 10 and then 11?
Ya know, memory is like yor sponge thingy, it shrinks over time
Ontario Dildo Inspector
I also have experienced shrinkage but of a different variety... wonder if it is related
Cheap dedis are my drug, and I'm too far gone to turn back.
My Debian 11 (fresh install, not upgraded) /etc/default/grub file looks like this:
GRUB_DEFAULT=0
GRUB_TIMEOUT=5
GRUB_DISTRIBUTOR=
lsb_release -i -s 2> /dev/null || echo Debian
GRUB_CMDLINE_LINUX_DEFAULT="quiet"
GRUB_CMDLINE_LINUX="net.ifnames=0 biosdevname=0"
should I edit it to look like this:
GRUB_DEFAULT=0
GRUB_TIMEOUT=5
GRUB_DISTRIBUTOR=
lsb_release -i -s 2> /dev/null || echo Debian
GRUB_CMDLINE_LINUX_DEFAULT="quiet"
GRUB_CMDLINE_LINUX="net.ifnames=0 biosdevname=0"
iommu=off
or maybe:
amd_iommu=off ? (it's a Ryzen CPU on the VPS)
I booted to the System Rescue CD, started desktop, and it reports 864.76MB . Booted it again and ran MemTest86+ and it reports 895MB
So it's looking like the provider is supplying the correct amount of RAM and just need to figure out where those sneaky MBs are hiding.
Someone is playing with the ram slider.
Likely so you complain to him and he would have a reason to be very angry at you.
I don't understand why people bare with shitty providers.
Am sure that is not the case because a clean boot to System Rescue CD and running MemTest86+ reports 895MB
Booting to System Rescue CD and starting desktop reports reports 864.76MB
Booting to Debian 11 reports 838MB in Virtualmin control panel, and I got the same when running YABS.
Seems likely now it's something to do with the OS. What confused me is that when I first got the VPS it reported 896MB, it dropped after a year, and dropped again a couple months ago.
There is a simple explanation somebody is gonna know, please share.
It should be in the
GRUB_CMDLINE_LINUX
line, likeGRUB_CMDLINE_LINUX="net.ifnames=0 biosdevname=0 iommu=off"
This affects some kernel versions, so no sure whether it is relevant to your current OS or not, but easy to try.
I think by default you'll get 16MB reserved for VGA video console. I think the rest tends to be things like DMA buffers, but the earlier lines in
dmesg
should give the clues. I'm not an expert.People should bare with shitty providers!
The all seeing eye sees everything...
Or at least exchange naked pictures
Ontario Dildo Inspector