On Tue, Nov 28, 2000 at 01:08:44PM -0800, Ben Ford wrote:
> Jakob Østergaard wrote:
>
>
>
> > comments, Riel or Andrea ?). I don't know of any good solution to this problem
> > other than just having enough swap space - after all, seriously, with today's
> > disks, who can't spare an extra few
Jakob Østergaard wrote:
> comments, Riel or Andrea ?). I don't know of any good solution to this problem
> other than just having enough swap space - after all, seriously, with today's
> disks, who can't spare an extra few hundred megs (which would usually be more
> than enough).
An embedded
On Mon, Nov 27, 2000 at 09:36:33PM -0600, Kevin Krieser wrote:
>
> > What would I like it to do? Warn me maybe before my swap goes to
> > zero. Kill the
> > program that is doing this possibly. Allow me to set a per
> > process memory / swap
> > limit so that no one process can suck up my syst
> What would I like it to do? Warn me maybe before my swap goes to
> zero. Kill the
> program that is doing this possibly. Allow me to set a per
> process memory / swap
> limit so that no one process can suck up my system resources.
>
There are several programs available with the typical Linu
What would I like it to do? Warn me maybe before my swap goes to zero. Kill the
program that is doing this possibly. Allow me to set a per process memory / swap
limit so that no one process can suck up my system resources.
I'd rather not increase swap if possible, as it was only this one page
> Last night I was browsing the web and I came across a page with
> LOTS of images. There were so many that it drove my swap space
> to ZERO. I still had 3 Meg of memory, but the system became
> virtually unusable and SLOW. (there were over 150 x 30k+ images
> on one page).
>
> Is this somethin
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