tech-embed archive
[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index][Old Index]
Re: No swap?
On Mon, Apr 08, 2002 at 04:45:26PM -0400, der Mouse wrote:
> Actually, it also does 1 to some extent.
>
> > This means that when the event occurs that clams the page, it may not
> > exist. When this happens, the operation that requested the page has
> > long since finished with a successful return, so the application
> > thinks it already owns the page. So the kernel cannot simply fail
> > the operation by returning a failure code. And since nothing else is
> > freeing up memory, the choices are limited.
>
> The kernel _can_ fail the operation. In a sense, that's what happens:
> "Killed: out of swap" is a rather drastic failure mode. I'd prefer to
> convert that to a new signal, rather than SIGKILL, one which kills by
> default. Then processes that care can mlock the relevant code, handle
> that signal on a (locked) signal stack, and do something appropriate.
>
> In particular, it would help my test programs immensely: I have
> programs that want to allocate memory until they run out, and then do
> something (typically, free up some command-line-specified amount of
> it). Getting a SIGKILL upon running out of memory makes that somewhat
> harder.
>
Upon detection 'out of swap' condition I would send signal to some designated
process (init comes to mind) which could be taught what to do, which process
is important, etc.
Regards,
Andrey
Home |
Main Index |
Thread Index |
Old Index