Why ulimit can't limit resident memory successfully and how?

sean picture sean · Jul 29, 2010 · Viewed 16.2k times · Source

I start a new bash shell, and execute:

ulimit -m 102400
ulimit -a
"
core file size          (blocks, -c) 0
data seg size           (kbytes, -d) unlimited
scheduling priority             (-e) 20
file size               (blocks, -f) unlimited
pending signals                 (-i) 16382
max locked memory       (kbytes, -l) 64
max memory size         (kbytes, -m) 102400
open files                      (-n) 1024
pipe size            (512 bytes, -p) 8
POSIX message queues     (bytes, -q) 819200
real-time priority              (-r) 0
stack size              (kbytes, -s) 8192
cpu time               (seconds, -t) unlimited
max user processes              (-u) unlimited
virtual memory          (kbytes, -v) unlimited
file locks                      (-x) unlimited
"

and then ,I execute compiling a huge project. the Linking of it will use large memory, more then 2G. The result, process ld used more then 2G resident memory.

is there any wrong ? how to use ulimit or can I use other programs to limit resident memory?

the target of limit resident memory, is because computer will freeze when one process almost used all memory.

Answer

Hasturkun picture Hasturkun · Jul 29, 2010

According to the man page for setrlimit:

RLIMIT_RSS

Specifies the limit (in pages) of the process's resident set (the number of virtual pages resident in RAM). This limit only has effect in Linux 2.4.x, x < 30, and there only affects calls to madvise(2) specifying MADV_WILLNEED

You probably want to set the virtual memory size instead, via ulimit -v