This is the forum archive of Homey. For more information about Homey, visit the Official Homey website.
The Homey Community has been moved to https://community.athom.com.
This forum is now read-only for archive purposes.
The Homey Community has been moved to https://community.athom.com.
This forum is now read-only for archive purposes.
Comments
It means your memory was full and Homey had to write some things to disk.
It's a measure most operating systems take when they need some more memory.
It might make this a little bit slower, but not always or not even noticeble.
I now have a flow running that reboots my Homey every two days, because Homey gets a little bit unstable after a while
I cant find a logical explanation why Homey memory gets cached if there is enough memory. But I am no specialist.
and
http://www.linuxhowtos.org/System/Linux Memory Management.htm
When an application needs memory and all the RAM is fully occupied, the kernel has two ways to free some memory at its disposal: it can either reduce the disk cache in the RAM by eliminating the oldest data or it may swap some less used portions (pages) of programs out to the swap partition on disk. It is not easy to predict which method would be more efficient. The kernel makes a choice by roughly guessing the effectiveness of the two methods at a given instant, based on the recent history of activity.
I understand that negative Other memory isn't a problem ("memory was full and Homey had to write some things to disk").
But what does it mean when you see about +200 Mb Other memory, a couple of days after the last reboot?
How are you so sure about the way Homey is managing memory?
If I read Git issues; Homey stopped listening, KuKa not working, mem usage very high, reboot; its working again and mem usage is low.
then I think there something going on.
Steadily growing (never seen this before, then again - I don't spend my days looking at this)
Geek info:
Seven hours later , another 10MB extra in Other
Update: it's now at 196MB. Exciting!
http://www.linuxatemyram.com/
After a reboot it's a nice multi-colored bar as it should be. But... after hours (a day?) it will look more or less black/grey again.
As an experiment I just disabled "HomeyDash" to see what happens... result:
EDIT: I myself disabled Homey Logger, HomeyDash, iCalendar, IFTTT, Smart Presence and my Homey is much more stable in memory use.
Homey was needed, but it's free now. I'm going to do a reboot now and post again in about 10 minutes... but I'm sure it will look more colorfull then
... and about 5 minutes later...
So... I think this looks fairly normal.... for now.