Hello,
Thank you very much for the email. In reply:
1. The system ran out of memory. Linux's oom-killer killed Kamailio.
then all
the instructions I gave are useless, they are for debugging
kamailio's internal memory manager, which handles pkg and shm mallocs.
The chances to be from kamailio itself are very low now. Do you do lot
of mi commands (e.g., kamctl ...)? The mi api uses system malloc, but
the rest of code should use internal memory manager which does not go
beyond the limits set with -m and -M, thus not causing an OS memory
exhaustion.
Can you list what modules are you loading? At some point it was a leak
in libssl, in case you use tls a lot. But could be another external
library...
Cheers,
Daniel
2. You're right, DEBUG_MEMORY is a local configuration setting. If
defined it sets memdbg to -2, and memlog to -2. The debug setting is -1.
3. We'll try setting mem_summary=12, thanks.
4. We'll try setting asynchronous syslog, thanks.
5. Our configuration totals 338 lines, or approx 8.5kb. Is that a lot?
6. We'll try setting mem_join=1, thanks.
On 23 July 2013 16:53, Daniel-Constantin Mierla <miconda(a)gmail.com
<mailto:miconda@gmail.com>> wrote:
Hello,
first, to clarify, is the system memory or kamailio's pkg/shm
memory running out? If the operating system runs out of memory,
then should be a leak in a library, because kamailio modules uses
only from a pre-allocated chunk, not going over it.
On 7/23/13 7:33 AM, David Cunningham wrote:
Hello,
We're running a Kamailio 3.3.4 system, and Kamailio is slowly
using more and more memory. Over a couple of weeks it will run
out of system memory.
We tried to enable memory debugging doing the following, but
it resulted in Kamailio not responding to any SIP packets.
Would anyone have advice please on how to debug the situation?
1. In Makefile.defs set MEMDBG to 1 and recompile Kamailio.
2. In kamailio.cfg add the line:
#!define DEBUG_MEMORY 1
do you set something special in config when DEBUG_MEMORY is 1? It
is not by default there, so I assume you added some rules based on
this pre-processor directive.
For memory troubleshooting, set memlog to a value lower than debug
parameter in config file and try with mem_summary=12 for a more
compact output. See more about these parameters in the wiki:
-
http://www.kamailio.org/wiki/cookbooks/3.3.x/core#memlog
Run kamailio for a while in normal conditions, then restart it to
get the memory usage summaries. There should be indication if
there is some leak, by seeing memory chunks allocated many times
from a function used at runtime. You can send the memory summary
for a process here, we can look at it.
While this was running and Kamailio didn't respond to packets,
it logged lots of lines like this:
Do you have syslog to be configured in asynchronous mode? See the
notes from:
-
http://www.kamailio.org/wiki/tutorials/3.2.x/syslog
The memdbg is less than debug value, that means printing few log
messages for each memory operation. You can make memdbg higher and
rely on memlog for memory summaries, otherwise will be lot of log
messages related to memory.
Jul 22 21:32:22 hostname kamailio: : <core>
[mem/q_malloc.c:369]: qm_malloc(0x4000e008, 128) called from
<core>: cfg.lex: addstr(1438)
Jul 22 21:32:22 hostname kamailio: : <core>
[mem/q_malloc.c:413]: qm_malloc(0x4000e008, 128) returns
address 0x40048918 frag. 0x40048900 (size=128) on 1 -th hit
Jul 22 21:32:22 hostname kamailio: : <core>
[mem/q_malloc.c:369]: qm_malloc(0x4000e008, 128) called from
<core>: cfg.lex: addstr(1438)
Jul 22 21:32:22 hostname kamailio: : <core>
[mem/q_malloc.c:413]: qm_malloc(0x4000e008, 128) returns
address 0x400489c8 frag. 0x400489b0 (size=128) on 1 -th hit
addstr() is a function used only for parsing configuration file,
as long as you can still see them, the configuration file parsing
was not finish. addstr() is not a source of leaks because it is
not used at runtime.
If you have large config file, then you can get close to the
limits of the private memory, which is set to 4MB. You can
increase its value using -M parameter (e.g., start kamailio with
-M 8 to set it to use 8MB of memory).
Over the time, the private memory can get used due to
fragmentation, you can set the mem_join parameter in config file
to avoid it (works when compiled with MEMDBG=1).
To monitor usage of internal pkg memory, then you can use sercmd
with pkg.stats command:
http://kamailio.org/docs/modules/3.3.x/modules_k/kex.html#idp16972640
Shared memory stats are printed by 'kamctl fifo get_statistics shmem:'
When you see significant increase of the memory usage, then you
can restart to get the summaries.
You should run these commands after start, just to see the initial
usage of memory.
Cheers,
Daniel
--
Daniel-Constantin Mierla -
http://www.asipto.com
http://twitter.com/#!/miconda <http://twitter.com/#%21/miconda> -
http://www.linkedin.com/in/miconda
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