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linux-next/include/asm-generic/resource.h
Tim Gardner 0ac1ee0bfe ulimit: raise default hard ulimit on number of files to 4096
Apps are increasingly using more than 1024 file descriptors.  See
discussion in several distro bug trackers, e.g.  BugLink:
http://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/663090
https://issues.rpath.com/browse/RPL-2054

You don't want to raise the default soft limit, since that might break
apps that use select(), but it's safe to raise the default hard limit;
that way, apps that know they need lots of file descriptors can raise
their soft limit without needing root, and without user intervention.

Ubuntu is doing this with a kernel change because they have a policy of
not changing kernel defaults in userland.

While 4096 might not be enough for *all* apps, it seems to be plenty for
the apps I've seen lately that are unhappy with 1024.

Signed-off-by: Tim Gardner <tim.gardner@canonical.com>
Cc: Dan Kegel <dank@kegel.com>
Cc: Al Viro <viro@zeniv.linux.org.uk>
Cc: Christoph Hellwig <hch@lst.de>
Signed-off-by: Andrew Morton <akpm@linux-foundation.org>
Signed-off-by: Linus Torvalds <torvalds@linux-foundation.org>
2011-05-25 08:39:43 -07:00

95 lines
2.8 KiB
C

#ifndef _ASM_GENERIC_RESOURCE_H
#define _ASM_GENERIC_RESOURCE_H
/*
* Resource limit IDs
*
* ( Compatibility detail: there are architectures that have
* a different rlimit ID order in the 5-9 range and want
* to keep that order for binary compatibility. The reasons
* are historic and all new rlimits are identical across all
* arches. If an arch has such special order for some rlimits
* then it defines them prior including asm-generic/resource.h. )
*/
#define RLIMIT_CPU 0 /* CPU time in sec */
#define RLIMIT_FSIZE 1 /* Maximum filesize */
#define RLIMIT_DATA 2 /* max data size */
#define RLIMIT_STACK 3 /* max stack size */
#define RLIMIT_CORE 4 /* max core file size */
#ifndef RLIMIT_RSS
# define RLIMIT_RSS 5 /* max resident set size */
#endif
#ifndef RLIMIT_NPROC
# define RLIMIT_NPROC 6 /* max number of processes */
#endif
#ifndef RLIMIT_NOFILE
# define RLIMIT_NOFILE 7 /* max number of open files */
#endif
#ifndef RLIMIT_MEMLOCK
# define RLIMIT_MEMLOCK 8 /* max locked-in-memory address space */
#endif
#ifndef RLIMIT_AS
# define RLIMIT_AS 9 /* address space limit */
#endif
#define RLIMIT_LOCKS 10 /* maximum file locks held */
#define RLIMIT_SIGPENDING 11 /* max number of pending signals */
#define RLIMIT_MSGQUEUE 12 /* maximum bytes in POSIX mqueues */
#define RLIMIT_NICE 13 /* max nice prio allowed to raise to
0-39 for nice level 19 .. -20 */
#define RLIMIT_RTPRIO 14 /* maximum realtime priority */
#define RLIMIT_RTTIME 15 /* timeout for RT tasks in us */
#define RLIM_NLIMITS 16
/*
* SuS says limits have to be unsigned.
* Which makes a ton more sense anyway.
*
* Some architectures override this (for compatibility reasons):
*/
#ifndef RLIM_INFINITY
# define RLIM_INFINITY (~0UL)
#endif
/*
* RLIMIT_STACK default maximum - some architectures override it:
*/
#ifndef _STK_LIM_MAX
# define _STK_LIM_MAX RLIM_INFINITY
#endif
#ifdef __KERNEL__
/*
* boot-time rlimit defaults for the init task:
*/
#define INIT_RLIMITS \
{ \
[RLIMIT_CPU] = { RLIM_INFINITY, RLIM_INFINITY }, \
[RLIMIT_FSIZE] = { RLIM_INFINITY, RLIM_INFINITY }, \
[RLIMIT_DATA] = { RLIM_INFINITY, RLIM_INFINITY }, \
[RLIMIT_STACK] = { _STK_LIM, _STK_LIM_MAX }, \
[RLIMIT_CORE] = { 0, RLIM_INFINITY }, \
[RLIMIT_RSS] = { RLIM_INFINITY, RLIM_INFINITY }, \
[RLIMIT_NPROC] = { 0, 0 }, \
[RLIMIT_NOFILE] = { INR_OPEN_CUR, INR_OPEN_MAX }, \
[RLIMIT_MEMLOCK] = { MLOCK_LIMIT, MLOCK_LIMIT }, \
[RLIMIT_AS] = { RLIM_INFINITY, RLIM_INFINITY }, \
[RLIMIT_LOCKS] = { RLIM_INFINITY, RLIM_INFINITY }, \
[RLIMIT_SIGPENDING] = { 0, 0 }, \
[RLIMIT_MSGQUEUE] = { MQ_BYTES_MAX, MQ_BYTES_MAX }, \
[RLIMIT_NICE] = { 0, 0 }, \
[RLIMIT_RTPRIO] = { 0, 0 }, \
[RLIMIT_RTTIME] = { RLIM_INFINITY, RLIM_INFINITY }, \
}
#endif /* __KERNEL__ */
#endif