dovecot/config processes open, and consuming all memory

Aki Tuomi aki.tuomi at open-xchange.com
Tue Aug 16 17:06:40 UTC 2022


Can you try increasing client_limit for service config, to maybe, say, 1000? There should be no reason to have lots of multiple config processes, so it sounds more like the client limit is being reached.

Aki

> On 16/08/2022 19:03 EEST filipe at digirati.com.br <filipe at digirati.com.br> wrote:
> 
>  
> The only thing I had initially configured was vsz_limit, but as the 
> number of clients grew, the number of dovecot/config processes grew, and 
> with that I added idle_kill and service_count to try to minimize the use 
> of ram memory
> In dovecot 2.2.33.2 , another server, has the same amount of accounts (+ 
> or -30 thousand) but there is only one dovecot/config process and every 
> dovecot does not consume more than 5Gb
> 
> On 16/08/2022 06:20, Aki Tuomi wrote:
> >> On 16/08/2022 03:40 EEST Joseph Tam <jtam.home at gmail.com> wrote:
> >>
> >>   
> >>> I'm having strange behavior in dovecot 2.3.16.
> >>> It's opening dozens of dovecot/config process and consuming all server
> >>> memory. Normally each process consumes between 700Mb and 1Gb of ram.
> >>>
> >>> Would anyone have an idea about this?
> >>>
> >>> service config {
> >>>     vsz_limit = 2048M
> >>>     idle_kill = 60s
> >>>     service_count = 1024
> >>> }
> >> Not sure it's related, but if you have service_count not 0 or 1, there
> >> is a strange interaction
> >> with other limits that could cause processes to hang around.  My
> >> description of problem
> >>
> >>      https://www.mail-archive.com/dovecot%40dovecot.org/msg85850.html
> >>
> >> Your situation is slgihtly different (service not imap_login, and
> >> idle_kill timeout should reduce
> >> lingering processes that caused my problem), but try setting
> >> service_limit to either 0 or
> >> 1 and see if your problem goes away, or gets worse.
> >>
> >> You can also see how many file descriptors are being held by the
> >> config process, and
> >> see the behaviour over time (e.g. monitor /proc/{pid}/fd/*); maybe
> >> that will give you a clue
> >> as to what the config process is doing.
> >>
> >> Joseph Tam <jtam.home at gmail.com>
> > The *default* configuration for service config is usually just fine. Is there some reason you decided to modify it in first place?
> >
> > Aki


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