Re: [CentOS] ulimit [SOLVED]

2010-04-11 Thread aurfalien
>> In my case, I am doing the change because of Samba. When you run >> tesparm, the lastest versions of Samba give the following warning: >> > In any case, if surviving the boot process is desired, the changes > should specifically be tested at boot, not just from a root login > shell. This issue

Re: [CentOS] ulimit [SOLVED]

2010-04-11 Thread Keith Keller
On Sun, Apr 11, 2010 at 03:49:04PM +0100, Miguel Medalha wrote: > > In my case, I am doing the change because of Samba. When you run > tesparm, the lastest versions of Samba give the following warning: > > rlimit_max: rlimit_max (1024) below minimum Windows limit (16384) > > When I add the line

Re: [CentOS] ulimit [SOLVED]

2010-04-11 Thread aurfalien
>>> I know it works because I just tested it and it survived the >>> server's >>> reboot. I ran "ulimit -a" and the new value was there. >>> >> ...from a login shell. If you don't have a login shell /etc/profile >> isn't read on bash startup. >> > > In my case, I am doing the change because of S

Re: [CentOS] ulimit [SOLVED]

2010-04-11 Thread Miguel Medalha
>> I know it works because I just tested it and it survived the server's >> reboot. I ran "ulimit -a" and the new value was there. >> > ...from a login shell. If you don't have a login shell /etc/profile > isn't read on bash startup. > In my case, I am doing the change because of Samba

Re: [CentOS] ulimit [SOLVED]

2010-04-10 Thread Keith Keller
On Sun, Apr 11, 2010 at 03:25:47AM +0100, Miguel Medalha wrote: > > > I need to to change the ulimit to 16384(ulimit -n 16384) on boot on > > Centos 5.4 64 bit. How do I do that? > > After replying to you, I tested the "solution" I gave you and it didn't > work. > > I found a working solution.

Re: [CentOS] ulimit [SOLVED]

2010-04-10 Thread Miguel Medalha
> I need to to change the ulimit to 16384(ulimit -n 16384) on boot on > Centos 5.4 64 bit. How do I do that? After replying to you, I tested the "solution" I gave you and it didn't work. I found a working solution. I added the following line to /etc/profile: ulimit -n 16384 This works as the