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Date:      Fri, 26 Jan 1996 10:49:41 +0200
From:      Tatu Ylonen <ylo@cs.hut.fi>
To:        petri@ibr.cs.tu-bs.de
Cc:        FreeBSD-gnats@freefall.freebsd.org, freebsd-bugs@freefall.freebsd.org
Subject:   kern/971: Default limits for number of processes per user ridiculously low
Message-ID:  <199601260849.KAA00602@trance.olari.clinet.fi>
In-Reply-To: <199601260733.IAA00914@achill.ibr.cs.tu-bs.de>
References:  <199601252320.PAA16660@freefall.freebsd.org> <199601260733.IAA00914@achill.ibr.cs.tu-bs.de>

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> IMHO those two numbers are sufficiently unrelated to not use that
> method. _If_ you really need 100 users with 1000 processes each, you
> can still set it in some global init file (xdm/Xsession or
> /etc/profile or whatever).

The point I am trying to make is that 40 is too low as the default
limit.  It is not enough for one user (and I know many people who have
more open windows than I do).  A large fraction of users will have
to increase it.  It is not widely known how to increase that limit in
the kernel.

I don't need 100 users with 1000 processes each.  I want one user with
1000 processes (or even 200).

Why not make the per-user's limit be e.g. max(40,systemwide_maxproc/5)?

Maxusers is quite widely known and exists on many systems.  It would
be convenient to get rid of silly restrictions like this by increasing
maxusers.  I don't care if eats a little memory.  I just want it to
work and don't want to fight with it.

I would set the soft limit in /etc/rc if it was easy, but it is a
/bin/sh script and /bin/sh does not support setting limits...

    Tatu Ylonen <ylo@cs.hut.fi>



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