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Full Discussion: physical memory
Top Forums UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers physical memory Post 39542 by auswipe on Thursday 21st of August 2003 09:48:11 PM
Old 08-21-2003
Re: physical memory

Quote:
Originally posted by cchien
It is just a general question....is there a limit on the memory? I am looking into a process to store image files on the unix server which will be accessed by the application, and I just wonder if there is any limit regarding the physical or virtual memory. I am very new to unix, so thanks for any help!
Normally the hardware will limit the maximum amount of RAM a system can use. For example, most 32 bit Intel systems can handle a maximum of 4 gigs of RAM. There are some exceptions, but they are not common.

Swap file size will be limited by the filesystem that they sit on.
 

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XZDEC(1)							     XZ Utils								  XZDEC(1)

NAME
xzdec, lzmadec - Small .xz and .lzma decompressors SYNOPSIS
xzdec [option]... [file]... lzmadec [option]... [file]... DESCRIPTION
xzdec is a liblzma-based decompression-only tool for .xz (and only .xz) files. xzdec is intended to work as a drop-in replacement for xz(1) in the most common situations where a script has been written to use xz --decompress --stdout (and possibly a few other commonly used options) to decompress .xz files. lzmadec is identical to xzdec except that lzmadec supports .lzma files instead of .xz files. To reduce the size of the executable, xzdec doesn't support multithreading or localization, and doesn't read options from XZ_OPT environ- ment variable. xzdec doesn't support displaying intermediate progress information: sending SIGINFO to xzdec does nothing, but sending SIGUSR1 terminates the process instead of displaying progress information. OPTIONS
-d, --decompress, --uncompress Ignored for xz(1) compatibility. xzdec supports only decompression. -k, --keep Ignored for xz(1) compatibility. xzdec never creates or removes any files. -c, --stdout, --to-stdout Ignored for xz(1) compatibility. xzdec always writes the decompressed data to standard output. -M limit, --memory=limit Set the memory usage limit. If this option is specified multiple times, the last one takes effect. The limit can be specified in multiple ways: o The limit can be an absolute value in bytes. Using an integer suffix like MiB can be useful. Example: --memory=80MiB o The limit can be specified as a percentage of physical RAM. Example: --memory=70% o The limit can be reset back to its default value (currently 40 % of physical RAM) by setting it to 0. o The memory usage limiting can be effectively disabled by setting limit to max. This isn't recommended. It's usually better to use, for example, --memory=90%. The current limit can be seen near the bottom of the output of the --help option. -q, --quiet Specifying this once does nothing since xzdec never displays any warnings or notices. Specify this twice to suppress errors. -Q, --no-warn Ignored for xz(1) compatibility. xzdec never uses the exit status 2. -h, --help Display a help message and exit successfully. -V, --version Display the version number of xzdec and liblzma. EXIT STATUS
0 All was good. 1 An error occurred. xzdec doesn't have any warning messages like xz(1) has, thus the exit status 2 is not used by xzdec. NOTES
xzdec and lzmadec are not really that small. The size can be reduced further by dropping features from liblzma at compile time, but that shouldn't usually be done for executables distributed in typical non-embedded operating system distributions. If you need a truly small .xz decompressor, consider using XZ Embedded. SEE ALSO
xz(1) Tukaani 2009-06-04 XZDEC(1)
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