How to find the available and free memory in my Linux system
In Category Linux
The Linux system supports a special file system called PROC in which you can find various file describing the state of the current operating system. There is a file /proc/meminfo which contains information about the size of RAM currently installed on the system and how much of it is being currently used by the Linux kernel.
[neo@techpulp ~]# cat /proc/meminfo MemTotal: 2009328 kB MemFree: 385204 kB Buffers: 58328 kB Cached: 1251596 kB SwapCached: 0 kB Active: 778772 kB Inactive: 763172 kB HighTotal: 1113152 kB HighFree: 1604 kB LowTotal: 896176 kB LowFree: 383600 kB SwapTotal: 883532 kB SwapFree: 883532 kB Dirty: 136 kB Writeback: 0 kB AnonPages: 231992 kB Mapped: 591780 kB Slab: 34480 kB SReclaimable: 21800 kB SUnreclaim: 12680 kB PageTables: 5352 kB NFS_Unstable: 0 kB Bounce: 0 kB CommitLimit: 1888196 kB Committed_AS: 715520 kB VmallocTotal: 114680 kB VmallocUsed: 49948 kB VmallocChunk: 63476 kB HugePages_Total: 0 HugePages_Free: 0 HugePages_Rsvd: 0 Hugepagesize: 4096 kB [neo@techpulp ~]#
The value of MemTotal is the size of RAM you have in the system and MemFree tells you how much memory is free. The value of SwapTotal is the collective size of all swap partitions used by Linux kernel.
Alternately you can use “free” command to get the same information.
[neo@techpulp ~]# free total used free shared buffers cached Mem: 2009328 1625664 383664 0 58888 1252000 -/+ buffers/cache: 314776 1694552 Swap: 883532 0 883532 [neo@techpulp ~]#