lodhi1978 I recommend to take any notebook with simple windows or Linux installed
configure any simple ftp server for example vsftpd and try again to upload some files, and also I woud recommend to set users unlimited in /etc/security/limits like this:
if the speed will be the same than provider has to look in their Router QOS configuration and it will show if some packets from your site are discarded due to the bandwidth restriction
On one of of solaris 7 boxes whenever i telnet or ftp it takes sometime before i get the prompt...any quick ideas where I should look...Thanks (3 Replies)
Hi all,
If I give ls , it lists files in 1 second.
It I give ls -l , it takes 8 seconds
There are only 55 files in the directory.
Any explanation?
Thanks
Wilson (4 Replies)
SCO Unix 5.0.5 moving to Red Hat
Intel EtherExpress Pro/100+
Newbie that just started working for a company and having an issue with transfer speeds over the network. Need to move 1.5GB of data from an old server with a single SCSI HDD to a new server with RAID 5 SATA HDD's. Goal was to FTP... (4 Replies)
Hi All
We have one SCO Server here and it never gives us any trouble. Until Now!! Well its not earth shattering but we have one user who is complaining of a very slow response time when changing to his Home Directory. Other users who have similar profiles are OK. I have su'd to this user and I can... (0 Replies)
My company has a private network, including a Apache web server (Linux) and some WinXP machines. The web server had been configured to use mod_proxy to connect to window update site via another company proxy server. It works for few years.
Recently, some parties had setup a DNS server on the... (2 Replies)
Hi,
My application runs on AIX, and clients complain of 3am slowdowns. This seems to have increased in the recent past.
Can someone guide me what are the various things that I need to be looking at on he AIX box, that could be causing slowdowns.
Thanks in Advance. (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: ggayathri
4 Replies
7. Post Here to Contact Site Administrators and Moderators
Hi,
I am experiencing slow response of unix.com from past 3-4 days.
like-
- most of the time the page does not reload instantly (when I do a manual reload from browser)
- not able to view graphics. ( displays only text).
- when posting into forum, the page gets stuck for considerably long... (6 Replies)
Solaris terminal responding very slow .. we have recently put a T3 hardware in to production , the applications running are it are perfectly and no complaints from user ..but when i ssh to the server ... the terminal response is very very slow .. it takes 3 seconds to show the character i type ..... (3 Replies)
hi,
good morning.
Ma trying to ftp from one AIX machine to another on the same segment of the network. The ftp to eshtablish connection from machine A to machine B is quick, but the reverse is taking is much time (2 mins).
anyone can help me to solve this issue please (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: kamaldev
1 Replies
LEARN ABOUT MINIX
prlimit
PRLIMIT(1) User Commands PRLIMIT(1)NAME
prlimit - get and set process resource limits
SYNOPSIS
prlimit [options] [--resource[=limits] [--pid PID]
prlimit [options] [--resource[=limits] command [argument...]
DESCRIPTION
Given a process ID and one or more resources, prlimit tries to retrieve and/or modify the limits.
When command is given, prlimit will run this command with the given arguments.
The limits parameter is composed of a soft and a hard value, separated by a colon (:), in order to modify the existing values. If no lim-
its are given, prlimit will display the current values. If one of the values is not given, then the existing one will be used. To specify
the unlimited or infinity limit (RLIM_INFINITY), the -1 or 'unlimited' string can be passed.
Because of the nature of limits, the soft limit must be lower or equal to the high limit (also called the ceiling). To see all available
resource limits, refer to the RESOURCE OPTIONS section.
soft:hard Specify both limits.
soft: Specify only the soft limit.
:hard Specify only the hard limit.
value Specify both limits to the same value.
GENERAL OPTIONS -h, --help
Display help text and exit.
--noheadings
Do not print a header line.
-o, --output list
Define the output columns to use. If no output arrangement is specified, then a default set is used. Use --help to get a list of
all supported columns.
-p, --pid
Specify the process id; if none is given, the running process will be used.
--raw Use the raw output format.
--verbose
Verbose mode.
-V, --version
Display version information and exit.
RESOURCE OPTIONS -c, --core[=limits]
Maximum size of a core file.
-d, --data[=limits]
Maximum data size.
-e, --nice[=limits]
Maximum nice priority allowed to raise.
-f, --fsize[=limits]
Maximum file size.
-i, --sigpending[=limits]
Maximum number of pending signals.
-l, --memlock[=limits]
Maximum locked-in-memory address space.
-m, --rss[=limits]
Maximum Resident Set Size (RSS).
-n, --nofile[=limits]
Maximum number of open files.
-q, --msgqueue[=limits]
Maximum number of bytes in POSIX message queues.
-r, --rtprio[=limits]
Maximum real-time priority.
-s, --stack[=limits]
Maximum size of the stack.
-t, --cpu[=limits]
CPU time, in seconds.
-u, --nproc[=limits]
Maximum number of processes.
-v, --as[=limits]
Address space limit.
-x, --locks[=limits]
Maximum number of file locks held.
-y, --rttime[=limits]
Timeout for real-time tasks.
EXAMPLES
prlimit --pid 13134
Display limit values for all current resources.
prlimit --pid 13134 --rss --nofile=1024:4095
Display the limits of the RSS, and set the soft and hard limits for the number of open files to 1024 and 4095, respectively.
prlimit --pid 13134 --nproc=512:
Modify only the soft limit for the number of processes.
prlimit --pid $$ --nproc=unlimited
Set for the current process both the soft and ceiling values for the number of processes to unlimited.
prlimit --cpu=10 sort -u hugefile
Set both the soft and hard CPU time limit to ten seconds and run 'sort'.
SEE ALSO ulimit(1), prlimit(2)NOTES
The prlimit system call is supported since Linux 2.6.36, older kernels will break this program.
AUTHORS
Davidlohr Bueso <dave@gnu.org> - In memory of Dennis M. Ritchie.
AVAILABILITY
The prlimit command is part of the util-linux package and is available from https://www.kernel.org/pub/linux/utils/util-linux/.
util-linux July 2014 PRLIMIT(1)