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Date:      Tue, 27 Dec 1994 20:37:35 -0500 (EST)
From:      Michael Olson <olson@cs.odu.edu>
To:        Sean Kelly <kelly@fsl.noaa.gov>
Cc:        FreeBSD-Questions@freefall.cdrom.com
Subject:   Re: Can't fork!!
Message-ID:  <Pine.SUN.3.91.941227203353.15040C-100000@galileo.cs.odu.edu>
In-Reply-To: <199412271647.AA228446871@yarmouth.fsl.noaa.gov>

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On Tue, 27 Dec 1994, Sean Kelly wrote:

> Date: Tue, 27 Dec 1994 11:47:51 -0500
> From: Sean Kelly <kelly@fsl.noaa.gov>
> To: olson@cs.odu.edu
> Cc: FreeBSD-Questions@freefall.cdrom.com
> Subject: Re: Can't fork!!
> 
> >>>>> "Michael" == Michael Olson <olson@cs.odu.edu> writes:
> 
>     Michael> I am going to edit /usr/include/sys/syslimits.h, up
>     Michael> CHILD_MAX from 40 to 100 processes, and build a new
>     Michael> kernel.
> 
> Urm, where I come from, max num of processes is a function of the
> MAXUSERS entry in your kernel config file.  Up that, and you get a
> larger proc table.  Besides, doesn't the kernel rebuild take includes
> from within the sys tree, not /usr/include?
> 
> --k
> 

I'm not running out of space in my process table. I can still run more
processes as root or by logging in under a different user name. I tried
uping the entry under /usr/include/sys/syslimits.h and it didn't help.
(Probably because your right about all the includes being in the src/ 
tree. But I don't know what to change to fix this. (And no, limits under
tcsh is not the problem. It still occurs after doing a limits -h)

Still looking for any suggestions.

Thanks,
    Mike

"Why Not" is a perfectly good reason.




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