(Dist) Tune Solaris systems
The following tuning parameters are specific to the Solaris operating system. Because the Solaris operating system is not a WebSphere Application Server product, be aware that it can change and results vary.
On the Solaris operating system, WAS runs on the Oracle Hotspot JVM. It is important to use the correct tuning parameters with the Oracle JVM to utilize its performance optimizing features. See the JVM tuning information. Also, consider the following parameters specific to the Solaris operating system to ensure that WAS has enough resources.
Tasks
Configure the following settings or variables according to your tuning needs:
- Solaris file descriptors (ulimit)
Maximum number of open files supported. If the value of this parameter is too low, a Too many files open error is displayed in the WAS stderr.log file.
- How to view or set: Check the UNIX reference pages on the file descriptor limits for parameters and commands used. For the KornShell (ksh), the ulimit -n command can be used to set the desired file descriptor value and the ulimit -a command to display all current ulimit settings in place.
- Default value: 1024
- Recommended value: 10000
- Solaris TCP_TIME_WAIT_INTERVAL
- Notifies TCP/IP on how long to keep the connection control blocks closed. After the applications complete the TCP/IP connection, the control blocks are kept for the specified time. When high connection rates occur, a large backlog of the TCP/IP connections accumulates and can slow server performance. The server can stall during certain peak periods. If the server stalls, the netstat command shows that many of the sockets that are opened to the HTTP server are in the CLOSE_WAIT or FIN_WAIT_2 state. Visible delays can occur for up to four minutes, during which time the server does not send any responses, but CPU utilization stays high, with all of the activities in system processes.
- How to view or set: Use the get command to determine the current interval and the set command to specify an interval of 30 seconds. For example:
ndd -get /dev/tcp tcp_time_wait_interval ndd -set /dev/tcp tcp_time_wait_interval 30000- Default value: The default time wait interval for a Solaris operating system is 240000 milliseconds, which is equal to 4 minutes.
- Recommended value: 60000 milliseconds
- Solaris TCP_FIN_WAIT_2_FLUSH_INTERVAL
- Timer interval prohibiting a connection in the FIN_WAIT_2 state to remain in that state. When high connection rates occur, a large backlog of TCP/IP connections accumulates and can slow server performance. The server can stall during peak periods. If the server stalls, using the netstat command shows that many of the sockets opened to the HTTP server are in the CLOSE_WAIT or FIN_WAIT_2 state. Visible delays can occur for up to four minutes, during which time the server does not send any responses, but CPU utilization stays high, with all of the activity in system processes.
- How to view and set: Use the get command to determine the current interval and the set command to specify an interval of 67.5 seconds. For example,
ndd -get /dev/tcp tcp_fin_wait_2_flush_interval ndd -set /dev/tcp tcp_fin_wait_2_flush_interval 67500- Default value: 675000 milliseconds
- Recommended value: 67500 milliseconds
- Solaris TCP_KEEPALIVE_INTERVAL
- The keepAlive packet ensures that a connection stays in an active and established state.
- How to view or set: Use the ndd command to determine the current value or to set the value. For example:
ndd -set /dev/tcp tcp_keepalive_interval 300000- Default value: 7200000 milliseconds
- Recommended value: 15000 milliseconds
- Solaris kernel semsys:seminfo_semopm
- An entry in the /etc/system file can exist for this tuning parameter. This number is the maximum value of System V semaphore operations per semop call. The default value for this option is too low for highly concurrent systems.
- How to view or set: Set this parameter through the /etc/system entry: semsys:seminfo_semopm = 200
- Default value: None
- Recommended value: 200 (100 is appropriate for most systems, but 200 might be needed in some cases.)
This parameter has been superseded on the Solaris 10 operating system by the process.max-sem-ops resource control, which now has a default value of 512 per process. This default is sufficient for most applications. For more information on Solaris 10 parameters and resource controls, search for "tunable parameters" and "resource control" on the Sun Microsystems website at: http://docs.sun.com.
- Connection backlog
- Change the following parameter when a high rate of incoming connection requests result in connection failures:
ndd -get /dev/tcp tcp_conn_req_max_q ndd -set /dev/tcp tcp_conn_req_max_q 8000- Default value: For Solaris 8, the default value is 128.
- Default value: For Solaris 9 and Solaris 10, the default value is 128.
- Recommended value: 8000
- Large page support
Use large pages can reduce the CPU overhead of managing a large JVM heap.
With Solaris 9 and Solaris 10, large page support is provided by default. No operating system or JVM parameters are necessary to make use of large pages for the JVM heap.
This tuning procedure improves the performance of WAS on the Solaris operating system.
What to do next
After tuning the operating system for performance, consult other tuning topics for various tuning tips.
Tune Windows systems Tune Linux systems Tune AIX systems Tune HP-UX systems Tune the IBM virtual machine for Java http://www.redbooks.ibm.com/redbooks/SG247584/wwhelp/wwhimpl/js/html/wwhelp.htm