Hi; Today Ray Pittigher in his posting "Subject:Is this a Kernel Problem? (sh: page allocation failure. order:4, mode:0xd0)" included a table of memory allocations: "sh: page allocation failure. order:4, mode:0xd0 [<c0144410>] __alloc_pages+0x294/0x2a6 [<c014443a>] __get_free_pages+0x18/0x24 [<c0146f60>] kmem_getpages+0x1c/0xbb [<c0147aae>] cache_grow+0xab/0x138 [<c0147ca0>] cache_alloc_refill+0x165/0x19d [<c0148074>] __kmalloc+0x76/0x88 [<c013dff9>] audit_bprm+0x52/0x10a [<c014b953>] kunmap_high+0x63/0x80 [<c0163aed>] copy_strings+0x22b/0x235 [<c0164b66>] search_binary_handler+0x32/0x22a [<c0164ecb>] do_execve+0x16d/0x1fd [<c01049d5>] sys_execve+0x2b/0x8a [<c02d5ee3>] syscall_call+0x7/0xb Mem-info: etc ..." I have been looking for such a table for my memory allocations (just for a look-see). What command or utility can I use to get such a table? I would like to actually see (just for curiosity and understanding of how memory works) user space and kernel space allocations. I have several manuals that explain the use of memory, so I don't need more of that type of reading. I just want one look at the "real thing" on my own computer. Can anyone make some suggestions? -- Regards Bill