>>>>> "Ben" == Ben Rosengart <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
Ben> On Wed, 14 Jul 1999, John Nemeth wrote:
>> On one system I administrate, the largest process is typically
>> rpc.nisd (the NIS+ server daemon). Killing that process would be a
>> bad thing (TM). You're talking about killing random processes. This
>> is no way to run a system. It is not possible for any arbitrary
>> decision to always hit the correct process. That is a decision that
>> must be made by a competent admin. This is the biggest argument
>> against overcommit: there is no way to gracefully recover from an out
>> of memory situation, and that makes for an unreliable system.
Ben> $DEITY on a pogo stick, how many times do we have to hear the same
Ben> hypothetical argument?
Ben> Tell me, Mr. Nemeth, has this ever happened to you? Have you ever
Ben> come *close*?
Uh, since we don't run overcommit, the answer is specifically *NO*.
We have never had lack of swap space randomly kill one of our processes.
This is good, and this is the way we want to keep it.
I have had it happen on other systems. (Solaris, AIX) It was very
mystifying to diagnose. Sure, the systems were misconfigured for what we
were trying to do, but if I wanted build a custom system for every
application.... well... I'd be running NT.
] Train travel features AC outlets with no take-off restrictions| firewalls [
] Michael Richardson, Sandelman Software Works, Ottawa, ON |net architect[
] [EMAIL PROTECTED] http://www.sandelman.ottawa.on.ca/ |device driver[
] panic("Just another NetBSD/notebook using, kernel hacking, security guy"); [
To Unsubscribe: send mail to [EMAIL PROTECTED]
with "unsubscribe freebsd-hackers" in the body of the message