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Top Forums UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers /etc/pf.conf: cannot define table: Cannot allocate memory Post 302926130 by Azrael on Saturday 22nd of November 2014 06:56:37 AM
Old 11-22-2014
/etc/pf.conf: cannot define table: Cannot allocate memory

I've been working on a script with pf for a while and so far it is half way working. It handles smaller lists of ips I add to tables fine. However, anything larger I get the following error:

Code:
/etc/pf.conf:45: cannot define table table_name: Cannot allocate memory

I looked through some documentation on pf and found that by default it doesn't allow tables to have more than 200,000 entries. I found the lists I had this size and split into lists of 100,000. Then I tried 50,000 and 25,000 but I kept getting this error.

I also tried increasing my limits in pf:

Code:
# pfctl -sa | tail -n 5
LIMITS:
states        hard limit    20000
src-nodes     hard limit    20000
frags         hard limit    10000
table-entries hard limit 60000000

Any suggestions much appreciated.

---------- Post updated 11-22-14 at 07:56 AM ---------- Previous update was 11-21-14 at 12:56 PM ----------

Turns out after a LOT of trial and error this was just due to a syntax error in one of my table files that "pfctl -nf" was not picking up. I commented out that line and it now runs perfect.

Mods: You can go ahead and mark this one solved.
 

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plimit(1)                                                          User Commands                                                         plimit(1)

NAME
plimit - get or set the resource limits of running processes SYNOPSIS
plimit [-km] pid... plimit {-cdfnstv} soft,hard... pid... DESCRIPTION
If one or more of the cdfnstv options is specified, plimit sets the soft (current) limit and/or the hard (maximum) limit of the indicated resource(s) in the processes identified by the process-ID list, pid. Otherwise plimit reports the resource limits of the processes identi- fied by the process-ID list, pid. Only the owner of a process or the super-user is permitted either to get or to set the resource limits of a process. Only the super-user can increase the hard limit. OPTIONS
The following options are supported: -k On output, show file sizes in kilobytes (1024 bytes) rather than in 512-byte blocks. -m On output, show file and memory sizes in megabytes (1024*1024 bytes). The remainder of the options are used to change specified resource limits. They each accept an argument of the form: soft,hard where soft specifies the soft (current) limit and hard specifies the hard (maximum) limit. If the hard limit is not specified, the comma may be omitted. If the soft limit is an empty string, only the hard limit is set. Each limit is either the literal string unlimited, or a number, with an optional scaling factor, as follows: nk n kilobytes nm n megabytes (minutes for CPU time) nh n hours (for CPU time only) mm:ss minutes and seconds (for CPU time only) The soft limit cannot exceed the hard limit. -c soft,hard Set core file size limits (default unit is 512-byte blocks). -d soft,hard Set data segment (heap) size limits (default unit is kilobytes). -f soft,hard Set file size limits (default unit is 512-byte blocks). -n soft,hard Set file descriptor limits (no default unit). -s soft,hard Set stack segment size limits (default unit is kilobytes). -t soft,hard Set CPU time limits (default unit is seconds). -v soft,hard Set virtual memory size limits (default unit is kilobytes). OPERANDS
The following operands are supported. pid Process ID list. EXIT STATUS
plimit returns the exit value zero on success, non-zero on failure (such as no such process, permission denied, or invalid option). FILES
/proc/pid/* process information and control files ATTRIBUTES
See attributes(5) for descriptions of the following attributes: +-----------------------------+-----------------------------+ | ATTRIBUTE TYPE | ATTRIBUTE VALUE | +-----------------------------+-----------------------------+ |Availability |SUNWesu | +-----------------------------+-----------------------------+ SEE ALSO
ulimit(1), proc(1), getrlimit(2), setrlimit(2), proc(4), attributes(5), SunOS 5.10 8 Jun 1998 plimit(1)
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