Well,you are right 



-- 10.0:
=====

SHOW VARIABLES LIKE 'innodb_buffer%'

Variable_name                        VALUE           
-----------------------------------  ----------------
innodb_buffer_pool_dump_at_shutdown  OFF             
innodb_buffer_pool_dump_now          OFF             
innodb_buffer_pool_filename          ib_buffer_pool  
innodb_buffer_pool_instances         8               
innodb_buffer_pool_load_abort        OFF             
innodb_buffer_pool_load_at_startup   OFF             
innodb_buffer_pool_load_now          OFF             
innodb_buffer_pool_populate          OFF             
innodb_buffer_pool_size              2133852160   



[mysqld]
datadir=C:/Program Files/MariaDB 10.0/data
port=3313
sql_mode="STRICT_TRANS_TABLES,NO_ENGINE_SUBSTITUTION"
default_storage_engine=innodb
innodb_buffer_pool_size=2035M
innodb_log_file_size=50M
[client]
port=3313




-- 10.1
=====

SHOW VARIABLES LIKE 'innodb_buffer%'

Variable_name                        VALUE           
-----------------------------------  ----------------
innodb_buffer_pool_dump_at_shutdown  OFF             
innodb_buffer_pool_dump_now          OFF             
innodb_buffer_pool_filename          ib_buffer_pool  
innodb_buffer_pool_instances         8               
innodb_buffer_pool_load_abort        OFF             
innodb_buffer_pool_load_at_startup   OFF             
innodb_buffer_pool_load_now          OFF             
innodb_buffer_pool_populate          OFF             
innodb_buffer_pool_size              4289724416 


[mysqld]
datadir=C:/Program Files/MariaDB 10.1/data
port=3314
sql_mode="STRICT_TRANS_TABLES,NO_ENGINE_SUBSTITUTION"
default_storage_engine=innodb
innodb_buffer_pool_size=4091M
innodb_log_file_size=50M
character-set-server=utf8
[client]
port=3314


I did not notice the setting during installaton. IMO it is a rather aggressive settng for a desktop/developer/application testing system from 10.1.  But of course I should have compared configurations.



(BTW - SuSe 12.3 skips this config with no explicit innodb buffer pool setting (commented lines removed):

[client] 
# this section is empty

[mysqld]
innodb_file_format=Barracuda
innodb_file_per_table=ON
sql_mode=NO_ENGINE_SUBSTITUTION,STRICT_TRANS_TABLES

[mysqld_multi]
mysqld     = /usr/bin/mysqld_safe
mysqladmin = /usr/bin/mysqladmin
log        = /var/log/mysqld_multi.log
# details for multi instances all commented here

!includedir /etc/my.cnf.d 
# my.cnf.d contains load statements to plugin .so's for blackhole, federated and archive engines - all commented out.)



..so it is all explained.  But I think such setting should be more visible in the installer interface, in particular since it seems to have been changed between 10.0 and 10.1. But not a big issue of course.


 
-- Peter

On Fri, Nov 21, 2014 at 10:57 PM, Vladislav Vaintroub <vvaintroub@gmail.com> wrote:
MSI installation defaults to  1/8 of RAM for the Innodb bufferpool. You can change this value during the installation, see the screenshot is under "Other database properties'" section in https://mariadb.com/kb/en/mariadb/documentation/getting-started/binary-packages/installing-mariadb-msi-packages-on-windows/



On 11/21/14 21:45, Peter Laursen wrote:
Please see attached imaged - a screenshot of Windows Task manager.

I have a lot of MySQL and MariaDB servers installed (all needed for application testing). It is noticeable that MariaDB 10.1 uses around twice as much as much memory as compared to MariaDB 10.0, MySQL 5.6 and 5.7 (5 GB versus 2.5 GB in rough numbers).  Even more surprising to me as P_S is not running with 10.1 (as I understand). 

Further I have MariaDB 10.0 running virtualized in OpenSuSE 12.3 inside Virtualbox. The process for the virtual machine use only around 10% or memory as compared to MariaDB 10.0 running natively on Windows (there is also an active VM running Mint Linux - but MySQL is not running there currently) 

I also have a number of older MySQL servers (5.0, 5.1 and 5.5) The use much less memory.  That is expected as the configuration reserves smaller buffers. 

Both MariaDB servers in Windows use the configuration created by the installer. MySQL 5.6 adn 57 servers use the MySQL Installer standard "developer machine" configuration. The configuraiton of MariaDB 10 in SuSE is as shipped with the distro (I did not check it actually).

None of the servers have been connected to since system was restarted. System has been  running for approximately 4 hours and all servers start with Windows. The VM with SuSE has been running for approxmately 2 hours.

In the attached image I have framed and starred my observations.


I want to emphatize, that I don't face any problems with this at all.  I have 32 GB RAM and 4 CPUs each capable of processing 2 parallel threads,and I can run  Windows 7 with all the servers you see (and simultaneously use the system iinteractively for Internet browsing, playing media, processing photos, document creation/editing and what else you would do with a desktop system), as well as have the two VMs (both configured with an upper resource limit of 24 GB RAM and 6 CPU threads). 

The memory may be released if it is required by other processes. I don't think it is a problem to use memory if it is available if it will be released when it is required elsewhere (on the opposite it was a little expensive, so it would be a shame if it was not used at all!)

But still I find the find the MariaDB 10.1 number for memory use so much *off* as compared to comparable servers, that I think I should mention the observation here. IMO it should be understood *why* it happens and next it can be decided *if* a fix is necessary or not.


-- Peter
-- Webyog


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