Snow Owl Docs
9.x
9.x
  • Introduction
  • Quick Start
    • Create your first Resource
    • Import SNOMED CT
    • Find concepts by ID or term
    • Find concepts using ECL
    • Next steps
  • Setup and Administration
    • Plan your deployment
      • Technology stack
      • Hardware requirements
      • Software requirements
    • Configuration
      • Release package
      • Folder structure
      • Get SSL certificate (optional)
      • Preload dataset (optional)
      • Configure Elastic Cloud (optional)
      • System settings
      • Spin up the service
    • Upgrade Snow Owl
    • Backup and restore
      • Backup
      • Restore
    • User management
    • Advanced installation methods
      • Install Snow Owl
        • Using an archive
        • Using RPM
        • Using DEB
      • System configuration
        • Disable swapping
        • File descriptors
        • Virtual memory
        • Number of threads
      • Configure Snow Owl
      • Start Snow Owl
      • Stop Snow Owl
    • Advanced configuration
      • Setting JVM options
      • Logging configuration
      • Elasticsearch configuration
      • Security
        • File realm
        • LDAP realm
  • Terminology Standards
    • SNOMED CT
      • Extensions and Snow Owl
      • Scenarios
        • Single Edition
        • Single Extension Authoring
        • Multi Extension Authoring
      • Development
      • Releases
      • Upgrading
    • LOINC
    • Socialstyrelsen Standards
      • ICD-10-SE
      • ICF
      • KVÅ (KKÅ/KMÅ)
  • Content syndication
  • REST APIs
    • FHIR API
      • CodeSystem
      • ValueSet
      • ConceptMap
    • Native API
      • Resource management
      • Content access
      • Content management
      • SNOMED CT API
        • Branching
        • Compare
        • Concepts
        • Reference Sets
  • Release notes
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  1. Setup and Administration
  2. Advanced installation methods
  3. System configuration

Virtual memory

Snow Owl uses a mmapfs directory by default to store its data. The default operating system limits on mmap counts is likely to be too low, which may result in out of memory exceptions.

On Linux, you can increase the limits by running the following command as root:

sysctl -w vm.max_map_count=262144

To set this value permanently, update the vm.max_map_count setting in /etc/sysctl.conf. To verify after rebooting, run sysctl vm.max_map_count.

The RPM and Debian packages will configure this setting automatically. No further configuration is required.

Last updated 1 year ago