On Thu, 15 Jul 1999, Daniel C. Sobral wrote: > "Charles M. Hannum" wrote: > > > > That's also objectively false. Most such environments I've had > > experience with are, in fact, multi-user systems. As you've pointed > > out yourself, there is no combination of resource limits and whatnot > > that are guaranteed to prevent `crashing' a multi-user system due to > > overcommit. My simulation should not be axed because of a bug in > > someone else's program. (This is also not hypothetical. There was a > > bug in one version of bash that caused it to consume all the memory it > > could and then fall over.) > > In which case the program that consumed all memory will be killed. > The program killed is +NOT+ the one demanding memory, it's the one > with most of it.
So why don't we do something else: when we're down to a certain amount of backing store, start collecting statistics. When we're out, we check the statistics and find what process has been allocating most of it. We kill that process. > > -- > Daniel C. Sobral (8-DCS) > d...@newsguy.com > d...@freebsd.org > > "Would you like to go out with me?" > "I'd love to." > "Oh, well, n... err... would you?... ahh... huh... what do I do > next?" > Brian Fundakowski Feldman _ __ ___ ____ ___ ___ ___ gr...@freebsd.org _ __ ___ | _ ) __| \ FreeBSD: The Power to Serve! _ __ | _ \._ \ |) | http://www.FreeBSD.org/ _ |___/___/___/ To Unsubscribe: send mail to majord...@freebsd.org with "unsubscribe freebsd-hackers" in the body of the message