OpenVZ Forum


Home » General » Discussions » What is "burstable ram"
What is "burstable ram" [message #9992] Fri, 02 February 2007 14:36 Go to next message
mperkel is currently offline  mperkel
Messages: 253
Registered: December 2006
Senior Member
I see VPS vendors talking about "burstable" ram. What exactly does this mean?


Re: What is "burstable ram" [message #9996 is a reply to message #9992] Fri, 02 February 2007 20:11 Go to previous messageGo to next message
devonblzx is currently offline  devonblzx
Messages: 127
Registered: December 2006
Senior Member
Burstable RAM is RAM your VPS has the ability to use but isn't guaranteed to. Basically it's for spikes in usage not consistent usage like Guaranteed RAM.

http://static.openvz.org/userbars/openvz-user-2.png
ByteOnSite President
Re: What is "burstable ram" [message #10009 is a reply to message #9992] Sun, 04 February 2007 22:52 Go to previous messageGo to next message
mperkel is currently offline  mperkel
Messages: 253
Registered: December 2006
Senior Member
I guess I'm really asking what settings determine the burstable ram?

Re: What is "burstable ram" [message #10010 is a reply to message #10009] Mon, 05 February 2007 03:55 Go to previous messageGo to next message
devonblzx is currently offline  devonblzx
Messages: 127
Registered: December 2006
Senior Member
Type this command in your VPS, "cat /proc/user_beancounters".

Privvmpages is burstable RAM, vmguarpages is guaranteed RAM. (Those are the two different settings)


http://static.openvz.org/userbars/openvz-user-2.png
ByteOnSite President
Re: What is "burstable ram" [message #10011 is a reply to message #10010] Mon, 05 February 2007 03:56 Go to previous messageGo to next message
mperkel is currently offline  mperkel
Messages: 253
Registered: December 2006
Senior Member
Thank you.

Re: What is "burstable ram" [message #24914 is a reply to message #9992] Tue, 11 December 2007 23:27 Go to previous message
SoftDux is currently offline  SoftDux
Messages: 55
Registered: November 2007
Location: Johannesburg, South Afric...
Member
correct me if I'm wrong, but I was under the impression that OpenVZ doesn't use burst RAM, but rather guaranteed RAM?
Previous Topic: What happens if a user upgrades a VPS kernel?
Next Topic: 64bit Centos Host with a 32bit centos guest possible?
Goto Forum:
  


Current Time: Fri May 17 13:38:45 GMT 2024

Total time taken to generate the page: 0.01577 seconds