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Examples
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For the case when Buffer Pool and MTL memory are lumped together, you can multiply "Total pages" by 8 to get the total KB, convert the "Private Bytes" to KB from bytes, and then subtract "Total pages" from "Private Bytes" to get the non-buffer pool (MTL) value.
MSDN Blogs 2009
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For the case when Buffer Pool and MTL memory are lumped together, you can multiply "Total pages" by 8 to get the total KB, convert the "Private Bytes" to KB from bytes, and then subtract "Total pages" from "Private Bytes" to get the non-buffer pool (MTL) value.
MSDN Blogs 2009
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Under these two scenarios, "Private Bytes" only represents non-buffer pool memory.
MSDN Blogs 2009
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Otherwise, "Private Bytes" equals the value of both buffer pool and non-buffer pool memory.
MSDN Blogs 2009
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Under these two scenarios, "Private Bytes" only represents non-buffer pool memory.
MSDN Blogs 2009
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Under these two scenarios, "Private Bytes" only represents non-buffer pool memory.
MSDN Blogs 2009
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Otherwise, "Private Bytes" equals the value of both buffer pool and non-buffer pool memory.
MSDN Blogs 2009
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For the case when Buffer Pool and MTL memory are lumped together, you can multiply "Total pages" by 8 to get the total KB, convert the "Private Bytes" to KB from bytes, and then subtract "Total pages" from "Private Bytes" to get the non-buffer pool (MTL) value.
MSDN Blogs 2009
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Yesterday I had a discussion on how to determine the non-buffer pool memory usage (formerly called MemToLeave / MTL) for a SQL Server 2005 64-bit instance.
MSDN Blogs 2009
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Yesterday I had a discussion on how to determine the non-buffer pool memory usage (formerly called MemToLeave / MTL) for a SQL Server 2005 64-bit instance.
MSDN Blogs 2009
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