About AMF tunable parameters
You can set the Asynchronous Monitoring Framework (AMF) kernel module tunable using the following command:
# amfconfig -T tunable_name=tunable_value,
tunable_name=tunable_value...
Table: AMF tunable parameters lists the possible tunable parameters for the AMF kernel:
Table: AMF tunable parameters
AMF parameter
|
Description |
Value |
dbglogsz
|
AMF maintains an in-memory debug log. This parameter (specified in units of KBs) controls the amount of kernel memory allocated for this log.
|
Min - 4
Max - 512
Default - 256
|
processhashsz
|
AMF stores registered events in an event type specific hash table. This parameter controls the number of buckets allocated for the hash table used to store process-related events.
|
Min - 64
Max - 8192
Default - 2048
|
mnthashsz
|
AMF stores registered events in an event type specific hash table. This parameter controls the number of buckets allocated for the hash table used to store mount-related events.
|
Min - 64
Max - 8192
Default - 512
|
conthashsz
|
AMF stores registered events in an event type specific hash table. This parameter controls the number of buckets allocated for the hash table used to store container-related events. |
Min - 1
Max - 64
Default - 32
|
filehashsz
|
AMF stores registered events in an event type specific hash table. This parameter controls the number of buckets allocated for the hash table used to store file-related events. |
Min - 1
Max - 64
Default - 32
|
dirhashsz
|
AMF stores registered events in an event type specific hash table. This parameter controls the number of buckets allocated for the hash table used to store directory-related events. |
Min - 1
Max - 64
Default - 32
|
The parameter values that you update are reflected after you reconfigure AMF driver. Note that if you unload the module, the updated values are lost. You must unconfigure the module using the amfconfig -U or equivalent command and then reconfigure using the amfconfig -c command for the updated tunables to be effective. If you want to set the tunables at module load time, you can write these amfconfig commands in the amftab
file.
See the amftab(4) manual page for details.