300234ab6698277fb261a87be72f89ef94d3697a doc: update bitcoin.conf maxconnections info (Jon Atack)
926827065ffa56b75e9261f63d49b924d4bced0f doc: update reduce-memory.md peer connections info (Jon Atack)
Pull request description:
This patch updates the documentation in `doc/reduce-memory.md` and `share/examples/bitcoin.conf` regarding the peer connections limits and `-maxconnections`
ACKs for top commit:
jarolrod:
re-ACK 300234ab6698277fb261a87be72f89ef94d3697a
laanwj:
ACK 300234ab6698277fb261a87be72f89ef94d3697a
prayank23:
ACK 300234ab66
Tree-SHA512: 90f53626124afb50706e6a3b644bc7bb800bb7cf41ae7062c20c17b3d9bdf4a8d73b4cf188faec9113d772596f7e4bc36a4a69481cacb92cc55d5956181d0c31
3.4 KiB
Reduce Memory
There are a few parameters that can be dialed down to reduce the memory usage of dashd
. This can be useful on embedded systems or small VPSes.
In-memory caches
The size of some in-memory caches can be reduced. As caches trade off memory usage for performance, reducing these will usually have a negative effect on performance.
-dbcache=<n>
- the UTXO database cache size, this defaults to450
. The unit is MiB (1024).- The minimum value for
-dbcache
is 4. - A lower
-dbcache
makes initial sync time much longer. After the initial sync, the effect is less pronounced for most use-cases, unless fast validation of blocks is important, such as for mining.
- The minimum value for
Memory pool
-
In Dash Core there is a memory pool limiter which can be configured with
-maxmempool=<n>
, where<n>
is the size in MB (1000). The default value is300
.- The minimum value for
-maxmempool
is 5. - A lower maximum mempool size means that transactions will be evicted sooner. This will affect any uses of
dashd
that process unconfirmed transactions.
- The minimum value for
-
To completely disable mempool functionality there is the option
-blocksonly
. This will make the client opt out of receiving (and thus relaying) transactions completely, except as part of blocks.- Do not use this when using the client to broadcast transactions as any transaction sent will stick out like a sore thumb, affecting privacy. When used with the wallet it should be combined with
-walletbroadcast=0
and-spendzeroconfchange=0
. Another mechanism for broadcasting outgoing transactions (if any) should be used.
- Do not use this when using the client to broadcast transactions as any transaction sent will stick out like a sore thumb, affecting privacy. When used with the wallet it should be combined with
-
Since
0.14.0
, unused memory allocated to the mempool (default: 300MB) is shared with the UTXO cache, so when trying to reduce memory usage you should limit the mempool, with the-maxmempool
command line argument.
Number of peers
-
-maxconnections=<n>
- the maximum number of connections, which defaults to 125. Each active connection takes up some memory. This option applies only if inbound connections are enabled; otherwise, the number of connections will not be more than 11. Of the 11 outbound peers, there can be 8 full-relay connections, 2 block-relay-only ones, and occasionally 1 short-lived feeler or extra outbound block-relay-only connection. -
These limits do not apply to connections added manually with the
-addnode
configuration option or theaddnode
RPC, which have a separate limit of 8 connections.
Thread configuration
For each thread a thread stack needs to be allocated. By default on Linux, threads take up 8MiB for the thread stack on a 64-bit system, and 4MiB in a 32-bit system.
-par=<n>
- the number of script verification threads, defaults to the number of cores in the system minus one.-rpcthreads=<n>
- the number of threads used for processing RPC requests, defaults to4
.
Linux specific
By default, since glibc 2.10
, the C library will create up to two heap arenas per core. This is known to cause excessive memory usage in some scenarios. To avoid this make a script that sets MALLOC_ARENA_MAX
before starting dashd:
#!/usr/bin/env bash
export MALLOC_ARENA_MAX=1
dashd
The behavior was introduced to increase CPU locality of allocated memory and performance with concurrent allocation, so this setting could in theory reduce performance. However, in Dash Core very little parallel allocation happens, so the impact is expected to be small or absent.