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Full Discussion: Increase maxuproc value
Operating Systems Linux Red Hat Increase maxuproc value Post 302930515 by rbatte1 on Monday 5th of January 2015 08:18:44 AM
Old 01-05-2015
Hello Phuti,

It would be better to know why you have reached the limit rather than just increasing it. How have you set this limit so far, or is it the default? How many processes do you have, and why do you think you have run out?

My main concern is that something has gone into a loop and is generating processes all the time, so if increasing the limit without a boot is possible, then you will just have the problem growing. The limit is there to try to protect your system from something going wrong.

Has something recently changed for this server, e.g. has it now become production and therefore it's under untested load perhaps?

I think that the value can only be set at boot time, so it might be (I'd need to check) an update to the configuration, a kernel build and a boot to bring it in. If it was Solaris then i think it's simply a file update, but again a boot to bring it in. I think that AIX has them all set to maximum anyway.


If you can elaborate a little more, then we might be able to find a better solution.



Kind regards,
Robin
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TIME_SECOND(9)						   BSD Kernel Developer's Manual					    TIME_SECOND(9)

NAME
time_second, time_uptime, boottime -- system time variables SYNOPSIS
#include <sys/time.h> extern time_t time_second; extern time_t time_uptime; #include <sys/kernel.h> extern struct timeval boottime; DESCRIPTION
The time_second variable is the system's ``wall time'' clock. It is set at boot by inittodr(9), and is updated periodically via timecounter(9) framework, and also updated by the settimeofday(2) system call. The time_uptime variable is a monotonically increasing system clock. It is set at boot, and is updated periodically. (It is not updated by settimeofday(2).) The boottime variable holds the system boot time. It is set at system boot, and is updated when the system time is adjusted with settimeofday(2). The variable may be read and written without special precautions. All of these variables contain times expressed in seconds and microseconds since midnight (0 hour), January 1, 1970. The bintime(9), getbintime(9), microtime(9), getmicrotime(9), nanotime(9), and getnanotime(9) functions can be used to get the current time more accurately and in an atomic manner. Similarly, the binuptime(9), getbinuptime(9), microuptime(9), getmicrouptime(9), nanouptime(9), and getnanouptime(9) functions can be used to get the time elapsed since boot more accurately and in an atomic manner. SEE ALSO
clock_settime(2), ntp_adjtime(2), timeval(3), hardclock(9), hz(9) BSD
March 13, 2008 BSD
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