Op Thursday 30 Apr 2015 23:41 CEST schreef Tim Chase: > On 2015-04-30 22:18, Cecil Westerhof wrote: >> Op Thursday 30 Apr 2015 20:59 CEST schreef Dave Angel: >>> ulimit is your friend if you've got a program that wants to gobble >>> up all of swap space. >> >> Yes, my system is openSUSE 64 bit. I really should look into >> ulimit. The default is: > [snip] >> max memory size (kbytes, -m) unlimited > > Note that AFAIK, "ulimit -m" doesn't work on Linux > > http://unix.stackexchange.com/questions/129587/does-ulimit-m-not-work-on-modern-linux > > Based on some quick testing[1], it doesn't appear to work on OpenBSD > or FreeBSD either.
Yes, as I already found out you need to use -v. But it would be nice that there was an indication that -m is obsolete. Depending on the available memory you could use something like: ulimit -v $((4 * 1024 * 1024)) I can then do: l = range(int(1E8)) but: l = range(int(1E9)) gives MemoryError. And if I can also do (from another thread): happy_number_list(int(1E8)) if I did not something memory consuming. And if a (Python) process should use significantly less, it could be a good idea to tweak the ulimit call. -- Cecil Westerhof Senior Software Engineer LinkedIn: http://www.linkedin.com/in/cecilwesterhof -- https://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list