Jacob S wrote:
On Mon, 5 Dec 2005 14:20:34 +0100
Dieter Faulbaum <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
I have a small problem under Debian etch with a (vanilla) kernel
2.6.14.3 on a AMD 64 (32-bit) system with 1GB memory:
often I see error messages about running out of file handles.
'cat /proc/sys/fs/file-max' shows: 4096
This seems very sparse for 1GB memory.
Looking at Documentation/proc.txt I found this.
...
The value in file-max denotes the maximum number of file handles
that the Linux kernel will allocate. When you get a lot of error
messages about running out of file handles, you might want to raise
this limit. The default value is 10% of RAM in kilobytes. To change
it, just write the new number into the file:
...
# echo 8192 > /proc/sys/fs/file-max
Okay this works, but I don't understand why this value is so small.
Is anyone else here with such a problem and can explain why this
value is so small?
On another computer with etch (but an Intel Pentium 4 CPU) I get
89808, which is what I expect from the docu.
Maybe an obvious question, but have you checked to make sure Debian is
recognizing all of your ram properly? I have an AMD Athlon XP 2200+
(32-bit) with 1GB of ram and /proc/sys/fs/file-max shows 102249.
I have an AMD Athlon Thoroughbred XP 2700+ with 1GB of RAM and file-max
shows to be 102757.
The kernel should set this, no? Running 2.6.14-ck6 from:
http://members.optusnet.com.au/ckolivas/kernel/
H
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