I have a proxmox installed on an HP Proliant DL120 g9. with 8GB of RAM. In the proxmox I have virtualized the following:
1 pfsense acting as a proxy with ID 301 assigned to 4GB of ram
1 pfsense that acts as a balancer with ID 300 assigned 512 MB of RAM
With the HTOP command, it turns out that the overall consumption is 6 GB of RAM.
Query is Why consumption goes to 6GB of RAM?
Monitoring previous days, I see the following graph:
For the 09-11-2018 (22:00 pm) I see that RAM consumption is almost at the top and then low.
Coincidentally yesterday (15-11-2018) as at approximately 13:07 pm the users called me that there was no Internet access. The interruption was for a few minutes:
During those minutes I have no answers from the proxy server and the balancer.
If in case the consumption reaches 7.5 GB of RAM this would cause the server to restart automatically?
In what logs can I verify that the server has taken the decision to turn it off if it is the case? Does this usually happen with the Proxmox when it detects a high memory consumption?
Thanks for your attention
regards.
1 pfsense acting as a proxy with ID 301 assigned to 4GB of ram
1 pfsense that acts as a balancer with ID 300 assigned 512 MB of RAM
With the HTOP command, it turns out that the overall consumption is 6 GB of RAM.
Query is Why consumption goes to 6GB of RAM?
Monitoring previous days, I see the following graph:
For the 09-11-2018 (22:00 pm) I see that RAM consumption is almost at the top and then low.
Coincidentally yesterday (15-11-2018) as at approximately 13:07 pm the users called me that there was no Internet access. The interruption was for a few minutes:
During those minutes I have no answers from the proxy server and the balancer.
If in case the consumption reaches 7.5 GB of RAM this would cause the server to restart automatically?
In what logs can I verify that the server has taken the decision to turn it off if it is the case? Does this usually happen with the Proxmox when it detects a high memory consumption?
Thanks for your attention
regards.