Unique set size
In computing, unique set size (USS) is the portion of main memory (RAM) occupied by a process which is guaranteed to be private to that process. The unshared memory of a process is reported as USS.[1]
This concept is used for software running under the Linux operating system.[2] It was proposed by Matt Mackall because of the complications that arose when trying to count the "real memory" used by a process.[3] The concepts of resident set size or virtual memory size (VmSize) weren't helping developers who tried to know how much memory their programs were using.[4]
See also
References
- Dalmasso, Isabelle; Datta, Soumya Kanti; Bonnet, Christian; Nikaein, Navid (July 2013), "Survey, comparison and evaluation of cross platform mobile application development tools", 2013 9th International Wireless Communications and Mobile Computing Conference (IWCMC), Institute of Electrical & Electronics Engineers (IEEE), pp. 323–328, doi:10.1109/iwcmc.2013.6583580..
- Tsiligkos, Kleomenis; Meliones, Apostolos (August 2014), "Formulating Optimized Storage and Memory Space Specifications for Linux Network Embedded Systems", 2014 IEEE International Conference on High Performance Computing and Communications, 6th International Symposium on Cyberspace Safety and Security, and 11th International Conference on Embedded Software and Syst (HPCC, CSS, ICESS), Institute of Electrical & Electronics Engineers (IEEE), pp. 580–584, doi:10.1109/hpcc.2014.99.
- Mackall, Matt (2009), "smem: understanding memory usage" (PDF), Embedded Linux Conference.
- corbet (April 18, 2007), ELC: How much memory are applications really using?, LWN.net, retrieved 2016-03-17.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.