: :On Tue, 13 Jul 1999 11:59:25 -0700 (PDT) : Matthew Dillon <dil...@apollo.backplane.com> wrote: : : > We could have the ability to mark processes as being more or less : > preferable as kill candidates. I'm not sure I really care anymore, : > though... there is so much disk space available now that it is fairly : > difficult to run the system out of swap space. I don't think I've : > run any of my personal systems out of swap space for at least a year : > now! Usually the biggest process is the one responsible (note: MFS : > processes do not count, and they are immune from being killed). : :...I suppose it depends on what market you're going for, too. Some :systems (not even necessarily OLD systems, but maybe modern, embedded :ones, too) don't always have the option of having "so much disk space :available". : :Seems like you want your operating system to behave the `correct' way :depending on the environment in which it's being used. : : -- Jason R. Thorpe <thor...@nas.nasa.gov>
If you don't have the disk necessary for a standard overcommit model to work, you definitely do not have the disk necessary for a non-overcommit model to work. If you were to try to implement overcommit protection on a system with insufficient disk space, it probably wouldn't have enough reservable space to run basic system daemons, much less any actual servers. Read the part again where I mentioned the swap requirements for a non-overcommit model to operate at the same level as the current model. -Matt Matthew Dillon <dil...@backplane.com> To Unsubscribe: send mail to majord...@freebsd.org with "unsubscribe freebsd-hackers" in the body of the message