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Oracle Solaris 11.1 Tunable Parameters Reference Manual     Oracle Solaris 11.1 Information Library
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Document Information

Preface

1.  Overview of Oracle Solaris System Tuning

2.  Oracle Solaris Kernel Tunable Parameters

Where to Find Tunable Parameter Information

General Kernel and Memory Parameters

physmem

default_stksize

lwp_default_stksize

logevent_max_q_sz

segkpsize

noexec_user_stack

fsflush and Related Parameters

fsflush

tune_t_fsflushr

autoup

dopageflush

doiflush

Process-Sizing Parameters

maxusers

reserved_procs

pidmax

max_nprocs

maxuprc

ngroups_max

Paging-Related Parameters

lotsfree

desfree

minfree

throttlefree

pageout_reserve

pages_pp_maximum

tune_t_minarmem

fastscan

slowscan

min_percent_cpu

handspreadpages

pages_before_pager

maxpgio

Swapping-Related Parameters

swapfs_reserve

swapfs_minfree

Kernel Memory Allocator

kmem_flags

kmem_stackinfo

General Driver Parameters

moddebug

ddi_msix_alloc_limit

Network Driver Parameters

igb Parameters

mr_enable

intr_force

ixgbe Parameters

tx_queue_number

rx_queue_number

intr_throttling

rx_limit_per_intr

tx_ring_size

rx_ring_size

tx_copy_threshold

rx_copy_threshold

General I/O Parameters

maxphys

rlim_fd_max

rlim_fd_cur

General File System Parameters

ncsize

dnlc_dir_enable

dnlc_dir_min_size

dnlc_dir_max_size

dnlc_dircache_percent

TMPFS Parameters

tmpfs:tmpfs_maxkmem

tmpfs:tmpfs_minfree

Pseudo Terminals

pt_cnt

pt_pctofmem

pt_max_pty

STREAMS Parameters

nstrpush

strmsgsz

strctlsz

System V Message Queues

System V Semaphores

System V Shared Memory

segspt_minfree

Scheduling

disp_rechoose_interval

Timers

hires_tick

timer_max

SPARC System Specific Parameters

tsb_alloc_hiwater_factor

default_tsb_size

enable_tsb_rss_sizing

tsb_rss_factor

Locality Group Parameters

lpg_alloc_prefer

lgrp_mem_pset_aware

3.  Oracle Solaris ZFS Tunable Parameters

4.  NFS Tunable Parameters

5.  Internet Protocol Suite Tunable Parameters

6.  System Facility Parameters

A.  Tunable Parameters Change History

B.  Revision History for This Manual

Index

Pseudo Terminals

Pseudo terminals, ptys, are used for two purposes in Oracle Solaris software:

The default number of pseudo-terminals is sufficient for a desktop workstation. So, tuning focuses on the number of ptys available for remote logins.

The default number of ptys is now based on the amount of memory on the system. This default should be changed only to restrict or increase the number of users who can log in to the system.

Three related variables are used in the configuration process:

pt_cnt has a default value of zero, which tells the system to limit logins based on the amount of memory specified in pct_pctofmem, unless pt_max_pty is set. If pt_cnt is non-zero, ptys are allocated until this limit is reached. When that threshold is crossed, the system looks at pt_max_pty. If pt_max_pty has a non-zero value, it is compared to pt_cnt. The pty allocation is allowed if pt_cnt is less than pt_max_pty. If pt_max_pty is zero, pt_cnt is compared to the number of ptys supported based on pt_pctofmem. If pt_cnt is less than this value, the pty allocation is allowed. Note that the limit based on pt_pctofmem only comes into play if both pt_cnt and ptms_ptymax have default values of zero.

To put a hard limit on ptys that is different than the maximum derived from pt_pctofmem, set pt_cnt and ptms_ptymax in /etc/system to the preferred number of ptys. The setting of ptms_pctofmem is not relevant in this case.

To dedicate a different percentage of system memory to pty support and let the operating system manage the explicit limits, do the following:

Note that the memory is not actually allocated until it is used in support of a pty. Once memory is allocated, it remains allocated.

pt_cnt

Description

The number of available /dev/pts entries is dynamic up to a limit determined by the amount of physical memory available on the system. pt_cnt is one of three variables that determines the minimum number of logins that the system can accommodate. The default maximum number of /dev/pts devices the system can support is determined at boot time by computing the number of pty structures that can fit in a percentage of system memory (see pt_pctofmem). If pt_cnt is zero, the system allocates up to that maximum. If pt_cnt is non-zero, the system allocates to the greater of pt_cnt and the default maximum.

Data Type

Unsigned integer

Default

0

Range

0 to maxpid

Units

Logins/windows

Dynamic?

No

Validation

None

When to Change

When you want to explicitly control the number of users who can remotely log in to the system.

Commitment Level

Unstable

pt_pctofmem

Description

Specifies the maximum percentage of physical memory that can be consumed by data structures to support /dev/pts entries. A system consumes 176 bytes per /dev/pts entry.

Data Type

Unsigned integer

Default

5

Range

0 to 100

Units

Percentage

Dynamic?

No

Validation

None

When to Change

When you want to either restrict or increase the number of users who can log in to the system. A value of zero means that no remote users can log in to the system.

Commitment Level

Unstable

pt_max_pty

Description

Defines the maximum number of ptys the system offers

Data Type

Unsigned integer

Default

0 (Uses system-defined maximum)

Range

0 to MAXUINT

Units

Logins/windows

Dynamic?

Yes

Validation

None

Implicit

Should be greater than or equal to pt_cnt. Value is not checked until the number of ptys allocated exceeds the value of pt_cnt.

When to Change

When you want to place an absolute ceiling on the number of logins supported, even if the system could handle more based on its current configuration values.

Commitment Level

Unstable