Subject: Re: increasing a process's max data size
To: None <port-sparc@netbsd.org>
From: Ray Phillips <r.phillips@jkmrc.uq.edu.au>
List: port-sparc
Date: 12/06/2002 12:22:31
Thanks for the responses.
Chris:
>What does
>
> # ulimit -a
>
>say?
# ulimit -a
ulimit: Command not found.
"find / -name ulimit" gives no output. I didn't know about limit until today:
# limit
cputime unlimited
filesize unlimited
datasize 65536 kbytes
stacksize 512 kbytes
coredumpsize unlimited
memoryuse 421292 kbytes
memorylocked 140430 kbytes
maxproc 80
openfiles 64
# limit -h
cputime unlimited
filesize unlimited
datasize 262144 kbytes
stacksize 262144 kbytes
coredumpsize unlimited
memoryuse 421292 kbytes
memorylocked 421292 kbytes
maxproc 532
openfiles 1772
Bernd:
>Is that a really very heavily loaded squid on a machine with more
>than 256MB of RAM?
It's quite busy--potentially more than 100 clients--and has 448 MB
RAM. I'd like squid to use most of that. I know squid's performance
degrades significantly if it uses virtual memory and I checked that
as per the FAQ:
# pstat -s
Device 1K-blocks Used Avail Capacity Priority
/dev/sd0b 458640 0 458640 0% 0
/dev/sd1b 1376290 0 1376290 0% 0
Total 1834930 0 1834930 0%
>you can set the default data size limit (as opposed to the
>maximum limit) in the kernel configuration as well:
>
>options DFLDSIZ=bytes
>
>(see options(4))
DFLDSIZ and MAXDSIZ aren't mentioned in 1.5.2's options(4) man page
but they're in 1.6's. However, I used them both in a kernel
configuration file and built a new kernel from it with no sign of a
problem. I'll try it when I have a chance to reboot the SS10.
That's much better than altering the source code as I was thinking
might be required.
>You also have to make sure the new maximum data size is also the
>actual data size limit for the process. You can set the limits
>using "limit" or "ulimit" or "unlimit" (depending on the shell).
Do you mean even after booting from a kernel with DFLDSIZ and MAXDSIZ
set to, say 373293056 (356 MB), processes won't be able to use that
much automatically? I'd prefer it if I didn't have to execute limit
manually after a reboot to allow squid to use the full amount.
Perhaps it could be added to the RunCache script.
Ray