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TUNING(7)		Miscellaneous Information Manual	     TUNING(7)

NAME
       tuning -- performance tuning under FreeBSD

SYSTEM SETUP - DISKLABEL, NEWFS, TUNEFS, SWAP
       The  swap  partition  should  typically be approximately	2x the size of
       main memory for systems with less than 4GB  of  RAM,  or	 approximately
       equal to	the size of main memory	if you have more.  Keep	in mind	future
       memory  expansion when sizing the swap partition.  Configuring too lit-
       tle swap	can lead to inefficiencies in the VM  page  scanning  code  as
       well  as	create issues later on if you add more memory to your machine.
       On larger systems with multiple disks, configure	swap  on  each	drive.
       The  swap  partitions  on  the  drives should be	approximately the same
       size.  The kernel can handle arbitrary sizes but	internal  data	struc-
       tures  scale  to	 4 times the largest swap partition.  Keeping the swap
       partitions near the same	size will allow	the kernel to optimally	stripe
       swap space across the N disks.  Do not worry about overdoing it a  lit-
       tle, swap space is the saving grace of Unix and even if you do not nor-
       mally  use  much	swap, it can give you more time	to recover from	a run-
       away program before being forced	to reboot.

       It is not a good	idea to	make one large partition.  First, each	parti-
       tion  has different operational characteristics and separating them al-
       lows the	file system to tune itself to those characteristics.  For  ex-
       ample,  the  root and /usr partitions are read-mostly, with very	little
       writing,	while a	lot of reading and writing could  occur	 in  /var/tmp.
       By  properly  partitioning  your	system fragmentation introduced	in the
       smaller more heavily write-loaded partitions will not bleed  over  into
       the mostly-read partitions.

       Properly	partitioning your system also allows you to tune newfs(8), and
       tunefs(8)  parameters.  The only	tunefs(8) option worthwhile turning on
       is softupdates with "tunefs -n enable /filesystem".  Softupdates	 dras-
       tically	improves meta-data performance,	mainly file creation and dele-
       tion.  We recommend enabling softupdates	on most	file systems; however,
       there are two limitations to softupdates	that you should	 be  aware  of
       when  determining  whether  to use it on	a file system.	First, softup-
       dates guarantees	file system consistency	in the case  of	 a  crash  but
       could very easily be several seconds (even a minute!) behind on pending
       write  to  the physical disk.  If you crash you may lose	more work than
       otherwise.  Secondly, softupdates delays	the  freeing  of  file	system
       blocks.	If you have a file system (such	as the root file system) which
       is   close   to	 full,	doing  a  major	 update	 of  it,  e.g.,	 "make
       installworld", can run it out of	space and cause	the  update  to	 fail.
       For  this reason, softupdates will not be enabled on the	root file sys-
       tem during a typical install.  There is no loss	of  performance	 since
       the root	file system is rarely written to.

       A  number of run-time mount(8) options exist that can help you tune the
       system.	The most obvious and most dangerous one	is  async.   Only  use
       this option in conjunction with gjournal(8), as it is far too dangerous
       on a normal file	system.	 A less	dangerous and more useful mount(8) op-
       tion is called noatime.	Unix file systems normally update the last-ac-
       cessed time of a	file or	directory whenever it is accessed.  This oper-
       ation  is handled in FreeBSD with a delayed write and normally does not
       create a	burden on the system.  However,	if your	system is accessing  a
       huge number of files on a continuing basis the buffer cache can wind up
       getting	polluted  with atime updates, creating a burden	on the system.
       For example, if you are running a heavily loaded	web site,  or  a  news
       server  with  lots  of  readers,	you might want to consider turning off
       atime updates on	your larger  partitions	 with  this  mount(8)  option.
       However,	you should not gratuitously turn off atime updates everywhere.
       For  example,  the  /var	 file  system customarily holds	mailboxes, and
       atime (in combination with mtime) is used to determine whether a	 mail-
       box  has	 new mail.  You	might as well leave atime turned on for	mostly
       read-only partitions such as / and /usr as well.	  This	is  especially
       useful  for  /  since some system utilities use the atime field for re-
       porting.

STRIPING DISKS
       In larger systems you can stripe	partitions  from  several  drives  to-
       gether  to  create  a much larger overall partition.  Striping can also
       improve the performance of a file system	by  splitting  I/O  operations
       across  two or more disks.  The gstripe(8), gvinum(8), and ccdconfig(8)
       utilities may be	used to	create simple striped file systems.  Generally
       speaking, striping smaller partitions such as the root and /var/tmp, or
       essentially read-only partitions	such as	/usr is	a  complete  waste  of
       time.   You should only stripe partitions that require serious I/O per-
       formance, typically /var, /home,	or  custom  partitions	used  to  hold
       databases  and  web pages.  Choosing the	proper stripe size is also im-
       portant.	 File systems tend to store meta-data on power-of-2 boundaries
       and you usually want to reduce seeking rather  than  increase  seeking.
       This  means you want to use a large off-center stripe size such as 1152
       sectors so sequential I/O does not seek both disks and so meta-data  is
       distributed  across  both  disks	 rather	 than concentrated on a	single
       disk.

SYSCTL TUNING
       sysctl(8) variables permit system behavior to  be  monitored  and  con-
       trolled at run-time.  Some sysctls simply report	on the behavior	of the
       system;	others	allow  the system behavior to be modified; some	may be
       set  at	boot  time  using  rc.conf(5),	but  most  will	 be  set   via
       sysctl.conf(5).	 There	are several hundred sysctls in the system, in-
       cluding many that appear	to be candidates for tuning but	 actually  are
       not.  In	this document we will only cover the ones that have the	great-
       est effect on the system.

       The  vm.overcommit  sysctl  defines  the	overcommit behaviour of	the vm
       subsystem.  The virtual memory system always  does  accounting  of  the
       swap  space  reservation,  both	total for system and per-user.	Corre-
       sponding	values are available through sysctl vm.swap_total, that	 gives
       the  total  bytes  available  for  swapping, and	vm.swap_reserved, that
       gives number of bytes that may be needed	to back	 all  currently	 allo-
       cated anonymous memory.

       Setting	bit  0	of  the	vm.overcommit sysctl causes the	virtual	memory
       system to return	failure	to  the	 process  when	allocation  of	memory
       causes  vm.swap_reserved	 to exceed vm.swap_total.  Bit 1 of the	sysctl
       enforces	RLIMIT_SWAP limit (see getrlimit(2)).	Root  is  exempt  from
       this limit.  Bit	2 allows to count most of the physical memory as allo-
       catable,	  except   wired   and	 free  reserved	 pages	(accounted  by
       vm.stats.vm.v_free_target and vm.stats.vm.v_wire_count sysctls, respec-
       tively).

       The kern.ipc.maxpipekva loader tunable is used to set a hard  limit  on
       the  amount  of	kernel	address	 space	allocated  to  mapping of pipe
       buffers.	 Use of	the mapping allows the kernel to eliminate a  copy  of
       the  data  from	writer address space into the kernel, directly copying
       the content of mapped buffer to the reader.  Increasing this value to a
       higher setting, such as `25165824' might	improve	performance on systems
       where space for mapping pipe buffers is quickly	exhausted.   This  ex-
       haustion	 is  not  fatal; however, and it will only cause pipes to fall
       back to using double-copy.

       The kern.ipc.shm_use_phys sysctl	defaults to 0 (off) and	may be set  to
       0 (off) or 1 (on).  Setting this	parameter to 1 will cause all System V
       shared  memory  segments	to be mapped to	unpageable physical RAM.  This
       feature only has	an effect if you are either (A)	mapping	small  amounts
       of  shared  memory  across many (hundreds) of processes,	or (B) mapping
       large amounts of	shared memory across any number	 of  processes.	  This
       feature	allows	the  kernel  to	remove a great deal of internal	memory
       management page-tracking	overhead at the	cost of	wiring the shared mem-
       ory into	core, making it	unswappable.

       The vfs.vmiodirenable sysctl defaults to	1 (on).	 This  parameter  con-
       trols  how  directories are cached by the system.  Most directories are
       small and use but a single fragment (typically 2K) in the  file	system
       and even	less (typically	512 bytes) in the buffer cache.	 However, when
       operating  in the default mode the buffer cache will only cache a fixed
       number of directories even if you have a	huge amount of memory.	 Turn-
       ing  on this sysctl allows the buffer cache to use the VM Page Cache to
       cache the directories.  The advantage is	that  all  of  memory  is  now
       available  for caching directories.  The	disadvantage is	that the mini-
       mum in-core memory used to cache	a directory is the physical page  size
       (typically 4K) rather than 512 bytes.  We recommend turning this	option
       off  in memory-constrained environments;	however, when on, it will sub-
       stantially improve the performance of services that manipulate a	 large
       number of files.	 Such services can include web caches, large mail sys-
       tems,  and news systems.	 Turning on this option	will generally not re-
       duce performance	even with the wasted memory but	you should  experiment
       to find out.

       The  vfs.write_behind  sysctl  defaults to 1 (on).  This	tells the file
       system to issue media writes as full clusters are collected, which typ-
       ically occurs when writing large	sequential  files.   The  idea	is  to
       avoid  saturating the buffer cache with dirty buffers when it would not
       benefit I/O performance.	 However, this may stall processes  and	 under
       certain circumstances you may wish to turn it off.

       The vfs.hirunningspace sysctl determines	how much outstanding write I/O
       may be queued to	disk controllers system-wide at	any given time.	 It is
       used  by	 the  UFS  file	system.	 The default is	self-tuned and usually
       sufficient but on machines with advanced	controllers and	lots of	 disks
       this may	be tuned up to match what the controllers buffer.  Configuring
       this  setting  to  match	 tagged	queuing	capabilities of	controllers or
       drives with average IO size used	in production works best (for example:
       16 MiB will use 128 tags	with IO	requests of 128	KiB).  Note that  set-
       ting  too  high	a value	(exceeding the buffer cache's write threshold)
       can lead	to extremely bad clustering  performance.   Do	not  set  this
       value  arbitrarily  high!  Higher write queuing values may also add la-
       tency to	reads occurring	at the same time.

       The vfs.read_max	sysctl governs VFS read-ahead and is expressed as  the
       number  of  blocks to pre-read if the heuristics	algorithm decides that
       the reads are issued sequentially.  It is used by the UFS,  ext2fs  and
       msdosfs	file  systems.	 With  the default UFS block size of 32	KiB, a
       setting of 64 will allow	speculatively reading up to 2 MiB.  This  set-
       ting  may  be  increased	 to  get around	disk I/O latencies, especially
       where these latencies are large such as in virtual machine emulated en-
       vironments.  It may be tuned down in specific cases where the I/O  load
       is  such	 that read-ahead adversely affects performance or where	system
       memory is really	low.

       The vfs.ncsizefactor sysctl defines how large VFS namecache  may	 grow.
       The  number  of currently allocated entries in namecache	is provided by
       debug.numcache sysctl and the condition debug.numcache <	kern.maxvnodes
       * vfs.ncsizefactor is adhered to.

       The vfs.ncnegfactor sysctl defines how many negative entries VFS	 name-
       cache is	allowed	to create.  The	number of currently allocated negative
       entries is provided by debug.numneg sysctl and the condition vfs.ncneg-
       factor *	debug.numneg < debug.numcache is adhered to.

       There are various other buffer-cache and	VM page	cache related sysctls.
       We do not recommend modifying these values.

       The  net.inet.tcp.sendspace  and	 net.inet.tcp.recvspace	sysctls	are of
       particular interest if you are running network intensive	 applications.
       They  control  the  amount of send and receive buffer space allowed for
       any given TCP connection.  The default sending buffer is	32K;  the  de-
       fault  receiving	 buffer	 is 64K.  You can often	improve	bandwidth uti-
       lization	by increasing the default at the cost of eating	up more	kernel
       memory for each connection.  We do not  recommend  increasing  the  de-
       faults if you are serving hundreds or thousands of simultaneous connec-
       tions  because  it  is possible to quickly run the system out of	memory
       due to stalled connections building up.	But if you need	high bandwidth
       over a fewer number of connections, especially if you have gigabit Eth-
       ernet, increasing these defaults	can make a huge	difference.   You  can
       adjust  the buffer size for incoming and	outgoing data separately.  For
       example,	if your	machine	is primarily doing web serving you may want to
       decrease	the recvspace in order to be able to  increase	the  sendspace
       without	eating	too  much  kernel memory.  Note	that the routing table
       (see route(8)) can be used to introduce route-specific send and receive
       buffer size defaults.

       As an additional	management tool	you can	use  pipes  in	your  firewall
       rules  (see ipfw(8)) to limit the bandwidth going to or from particular
       IP blocks or ports.  For	example, if you	have a T1 you  might  want  to
       limit  your  web	traffic	to 70% of the T1's bandwidth in	order to leave
       the remainder available for mail	and interactive	use.  Normally a heav-
       ily loaded web server will not  introduce  significant  latencies  into
       other  services	even if	the network link is maxed out, but enforcing a
       limit can smooth	things out and lead to longer  term  stability.	  Many
       people also enforce artificial bandwidth	limitations in order to	ensure
       that they are not charged for using too much bandwidth.

       Setting the send	or receive TCP buffer to values	larger than 65535 will
       result  in a marginal performance improvement unless both hosts support
       the window scaling extension of the TCP protocol, which	is  controlled
       by the net.inet.tcp.rfc1323 sysctl.  These extensions should be enabled
       and  the	 TCP buffer size should	be set to a value larger than 65536 in
       order to	obtain good performance	from certain types of  network	links;
       specifically,  gigabit  WAN  links  and	high-latency  satellite	links.
       RFC1323 support is enabled by default.

       The net.inet.tcp.always_keepalive sysctl	determines whether or not  the
       TCP implementation should attempt to detect dead	TCP connections	by in-
       termittently  delivering	 "keepalives"  on the connection.  By default,
       this is enabled for all applications; by	setting	this sysctl to 0, only
       applications that specifically request keepalives will  use  them.   In
       most environments, TCP keepalives will improve the management of	system
       state  by expiring dead TCP connections,	particularly for systems serv-
       ing dialup users	who may	not always terminate  individual  TCP  connec-
       tions before disconnecting from the network.  However, in some environ-
       ments,  temporary network outages may be	incorrectly identified as dead
       sessions, resulting in unexpectedly  terminated	TCP  connections.   In
       such environments, setting the sysctl to	0 may reduce the occurrence of
       TCP session disconnections.

       The  net.inet.tcp.delayed_ack  TCP  feature  is	largely	misunderstood.
       Historically speaking, this feature was designed	to allow the  acknowl-
       edgement	 to  transmitted  data to be returned along with the response.
       For example, when you type over a remote	shell, the acknowledgement  to
       the character you send can be returned along with the data representing
       the  echo of the	character.  With delayed acks turned off, the acknowl-
       edgement	may be sent in its own packet, before the remote service has a
       chance to echo the data it just received.  This same concept  also  ap-
       plies  to any interactive protocol (e.g., SMTP, WWW, POP3), and can cut
       the number of tiny packets flowing across the  network  in  half.   The
       FreeBSD	delayed	 ACK implementation also follows the TCP protocol rule
       that at least every other packet	be acknowledged	even if	 the  standard
       40ms  timeout has not yet passed.  Normally the worst a delayed ACK can
       do is slightly delay the	teardown of a connection,  or  slightly	 delay
       the  ramp-up  of	a slow-start TCP connection.  While we are not sure we
       believe that the	several	FAQs related to	packages  such	as  SAMBA  and
       SQUID  which  advise  turning  off delayed acks may be referring	to the
       slow-start issue.

       The net.inet.ip.portrange.* sysctls control the port number ranges  au-
       tomatically  bound  to  TCP and UDP sockets.  There are three ranges: a
       low range, a default range,  and	 a  high  range,  selectable  via  the
       IP_PORTRANGE setsockopt(2) call.	 Most network programs use the default
       range   which   is   controlled	 by   net.inet.ip.portrange.first  and
       net.inet.ip.portrange.last, which default to 49152 and  65535,  respec-
       tively.	Bound port ranges are used for outgoing	connections, and it is
       possible	 to  run  the system out of ports under	certain	circumstances.
       This most commonly occurs when you are running  a  heavily  loaded  web
       proxy.  The port	range is not an	issue when running a server which han-
       dles mainly incoming connections, such as a normal web server, or has a
       limited number of outgoing connections, such as a mail relay.  For sit-
       uations	where  you  may	 run  out  of  ports,  we recommend decreasing
       net.inet.ip.portrange.first modestly.  A	range of 10000 to 30000	 ports
       may  be	reasonable.   You  should  also	consider firewall effects when
       changing	the port range.	 Some firewalls	 may  block  large  ranges  of
       ports  (usually	low-numbered  ports)  and expect systems to use	higher
       ranges	of   ports   for    outgoing	connections.	 By    default
       net.inet.ip.portrange.last is set at the	maximum	allowable port number.

       The  kern.ipc.soacceptqueue  sysctl limits the size of the listen queue
       for accepting new TCP connections.  The default value of	128  is	 typi-
       cally  too  low	for  robust  handling  of new connections in a heavily
       loaded web server environment.  For such	environments, we recommend in-
       creasing	this value to 1024 or higher.  The service daemon  may	itself
       limit  the listen queue size (e.g., sendmail(8),	apache)	but will often
       have a directive	in its configuration file to adjust the	queue size up.
       Larger listen queues also do a better job of fending off	denial of ser-
       vice attacks.

       The kern.maxfiles sysctl	determines how many open files the system sup-
       ports.  The default is typically	a few thousand but  you	 may  need  to
       bump  this up to	ten or twenty thousand if you are running databases or
       large descriptor-heavy daemons.	The  read-only	kern.openfiles	sysctl
       may  be	interrogated  to determine the current number of open files on
       the system.

       The vm.swap_idle_enabled	sysctl is useful in large  multi-user  systems
       where  you  have	lots of	users entering and leaving the system and lots
       of idle processes.  Such	systems	tend to	generate a great deal of  con-
       tinuous	pressure on free memory	reserves.  Turning this	feature	on and
       adjusting   the	 swapout   hysteresis	(in    idle    seconds)	   via
       vm.swap_idle_threshold1	and  vm.swap_idle_threshold2 allows you	to de-
       press the priority of pages associated with idle	processes more quickly
       then the	normal pageout algorithm.  This	gives a	helping	 hand  to  the
       pageout daemon.	Do not turn this option	on unless you need it, because
       the  tradeoff  you  are making is to essentially	pre-page memory	sooner
       rather than later, eating more swap and disk  bandwidth.	  In  a	 small
       system this option will have a detrimental effect but in	a large	system
       that  is	already	doing moderate paging this option allows the VM	system
       to stage	whole processes	into and out of	memory more easily.

LOADER TUNABLES
       Some aspects of the system behavior may not be tunable at  runtime  be-
       cause  memory  allocations  they	 perform  must occur early in the boot
       process.	 To change loader tunables,  you  must	set  their  values  in
       loader.conf(5) and reboot the system.

       kern.maxusers controls the scaling of a number of static	system tables,
       including defaults for the maximum number of open files,	sizing of net-
       work  memory  resources,	 etc.  kern.maxusers is	automatically sized at
       boot based on the amount	of memory available in the system, and may  be
       determined  at  run-time	 by  inspecting	 the  value  of	 the read-only
       kern.maxusers sysctl.

       The kern.dfldsiz	and kern.dflssiz tunables set the default soft	limits
       for  process  data and stack size respectively.	Processes may increase
       these up	to the hard limits by calling setrlimit(2).  The kern.maxdsiz,
       kern.maxssiz, and kern.maxtsiz tunables set the hard limits for process
       data, stack, and	text size respectively;	processes may not exceed these
       limits.	The kern.sgrowsiz tunable controls how much the	stack  segment
       will grow when a	process	needs to allocate more stack.

       kern.ipc.nmbclusters  may be adjusted to	increase the number of network
       mbufs the system	is willing to allocate.	 Each cluster  represents  ap-
       proximately  2K	of  memory, so a value of 1024 represents 2M of	kernel
       memory reserved for network buffers.  You can do	a  simple  calculation
       to  figure out how many you need.  If you have a	web server which maxes
       out at 1000 simultaneous	connections, and each connection  eats	a  16K
       receive	and 16K	send buffer, you need approximately 32MB worth of net-
       work buffers to deal with it.  A	good rule of thumb is to  multiply  by
       2, so 32MBx2 = 64MB/2K =	32768.	So for this case you would want	to set
       kern.ipc.nmbclusters  to	 32768.	  We recommend values between 1024 and
       4096 for	machines with moderates	amount of memory, and between 4096 and
       32768 for machines with greater amounts of memory.   Under  no  circum-
       stances	should	you specify an arbitrarily high	value for this parame-
       ter, it could lead to a boot-time crash.	 The -m	option	to  netstat(1)
       may be used to observe network cluster use.

       More  and more programs are using the sendfile(2) system	call to	trans-
       mit files over the network.  The	kern.ipc.nsfbufs sysctl	 controls  the
       number  of file system buffers sendfile(2) is allowed to	use to perform
       its work.  This parameter nominally scales with	kern.maxusers  so  you
       should  not  need to modify this	parameter except under extreme circum-
       stances.	 See the "TUNING" section in the sendfile(2) manual  page  for
       details.

KERNEL CONFIG TUNING
       There  are  a number of kernel options that you may have	to fiddle with
       in a large-scale	system.	 In order to change these options you need  to
       be able to compile a new	kernel from source.  The config(8) manual page
       and  the	handbook are good starting points for learning how to do this.
       Generally the first thing you do	when creating your own	custom	kernel
       is  to strip out	all the	drivers	and services you do not	use.  Removing
       things like INET6 and drivers you do not	have will reduce the  size  of
       your  kernel,  sometimes	 by  a	megabyte  or more, leaving more	memory
       available for applications.

       SCSI_DELAY may be used to reduce	system boot times.  The	 defaults  are
       fairly  high and	can be responsible for 5+ seconds of delay in the boot
       process.	 Reducing SCSI_DELAY to	something below	5 seconds  could  work
       (especially with	modern drives).

       There  are a number of *_CPU options that can be	commented out.	If you
       only want the kernel to run on a	Pentium	class CPU, you can easily  re-
       move I486_CPU, but only remove I586_CPU if you are sure your CPU	is be-
       ing  recognized	as  a Pentium II or better.  Some clones may be	recog-
       nized as	a Pentium or even a 486	and not	be able	to boot	without	 those
       options.	  If  it  works,  great!  The operating	system will be able to
       better use higher-end CPU features for MMU, task	 switching,  timebase,
       and  even device	operations.  Additionally, higher-end CPUs support 4MB
       MMU pages, which	the kernel uses	to map the kernel itself into  memory,
       increasing its efficiency under heavy syscall loads.

CPU, MEMORY, DISK, NETWORK
       The  type  of tuning you	do depends heavily on where your system	begins
       to bottleneck as	load increases.	 If your system	runs out of CPU	 (idle
       times  are  perpetually 0%) then	you need to consider upgrading the CPU
       or perhaps you need to revisit the programs that	are causing  the  load
       and  try	 to optimize them.  If your system is paging to	swap a lot you
       need to consider	adding more memory.  If	your system is saturating  the
       disk  you  typically see	high CPU idle times and	total disk saturation.
       systat(1) can be	used to	monitor	this.  There  are  many	 solutions  to
       saturated  disks:  increasing memory for	caching, mirroring disks, dis-
       tributing operations across several machines, and so forth.

       Finally,	you might run out of network suds.  Optimize the network  path
       as  much	 as possible.  For example, in firewall(7) we describe a fire-
       wall protecting internal	hosts with a  topology	where  the  externally
       visible hosts are not routed through it.	 Most bottlenecks occur	at the
       WAN link.  If expanding the link	is not an option it may	be possible to
       use the dummynet(4) feature to implement	peak shaving or	other forms of
       traffic	shaping	 to  prevent  the overloaded service (such as web ser-
       vices) from affecting other services (such as email),  or  vice	versa.
       In  home	 installations	this could be used to give interactive traffic
       (your browser, ssh(1) logins) priority over services  you  export  from
       your box	(web services, email).

SEE ALSO
       netstat(1),     systat(1),     sendfile(2),     ata(4),	  dummynet(4),
       eventtimers(4), login.conf(5), rc.conf(5), sysctl.conf(5), firewall(7),
       hier(7),	ports(7),  boot(8),  bsdinstall(8),  ccdconfig(8),  config(8),
       fsck(8),	 gjournal(8),  gpart(8),  gstripe(8),  gvinum(8), ifconfig(8),
       ipfw(8),	loader(8), mount(8), newfs(8), route(8), sysctl(8), tunefs(8)

HISTORY
       The tuning manual page was originally written  by  Matthew  Dillon  and
       first  appeared	in FreeBSD 4.3,	May 2001.  The manual page was greatly
       modified	by Eitan Adler <eadler@FreeBSD.org>.

FreeBSD	13.2		       October 11, 2022			     TUNING(7)

NAME | SYSTEM SETUP - DISKLABEL, NEWFS, TUNEFS, SWAP | STRIPING DISKS | SYSCTL TUNING | LOADER TUNABLES | KERNEL CONFIG TUNING | CPU, MEMORY, DISK, NETWORK | SEE ALSO | HISTORY

Want to link to this manual page? Use this URL:
<https://man.freebsd.org/cgi/man.cgi?query=tuning&sektion=7&manpath=FreeBSD+14.0-RELEASE+and+Ports>

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