We're running Asterisk 1.8 on a 32-bit Debian machine, and it has been fine for some time now. But! We've got such a incoming call volume over the few weeks that we'll have Asterisk occasionally restart itself. My hunch is that it is in part memory pressure. I can't add RAM and have it help, because it's 32-bit. I intend to move to a 64-bit machine, but I was hoping to wait until summer. Does anyone have any immediate tips for dealing with this sort of rush? Justin Sherrill - American Rock Salt P: 585-991-6825 F: 585-991-6925
On 14-02-10 10:37 AM, Justin Sherrill wrote:> We're running Asterisk 1.8 on a 32-bit Debian machine, and it has been fine for some time now. But! We've got such a incoming call volume over the few weeks that we'll have Asterisk occasionally restart itself. My hunch is that it is in part memory pressure. >What log entries are leading you to think that you're running out of RAM? -- Looking for (employment|contract) work in the Internet industry, preferably working remotely. Building / Supporting the net since 2400 baud was the hot thing. Ask for a resume! ispbuilder at gmail.com
On Mon, 10 Feb 2014, Justin Sherrill wrote:> We're running Asterisk 1.8 on a 32-bit Debian machine, and it has been > fine for some time now. But! We've got such a incoming call volume > over the few weeks that we'll have Asterisk occasionally restart itself. > My hunch is that it is in part memory pressure.I'm a 1.2 Luddite, but... I suspect it's not RAM. I have a CentOS 32bit box with 2GB that has 350 calls right now (last night's peak was 420), most in meetme conferences. How many concurrent calls are you handling? How much RAM is Asterisk consuming on your box? Any obese AGIs? I run tons of AGIs, but I write them in C. Does 'vmstat 5' show swapping? -- Thanks in advance, ------------------------------------------------------------------------- Steve Edwards sedwards at sedwards.com Voice: +1-760-468-3867 PST Newline Fax: +1-760-731-3000