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Date:      Thu, 14 May 1998 15:29:28 +0300
From:      Ruslan Ermilov <ru@ucb.crimea.ua>
To:        William Woods <wwoods@cybcon.com>
Cc:        FreeBSD Questions <questions@FreeBSD.ORG>
Subject:   Re: Weird stuff in log.....
Message-ID:  <19980514152928.B6479@ucb.crimea.ua>
In-Reply-To: <355ADD2F.72B27EAB@cybcon.com>; from William Woods on Thu, May 14, 1998 at 05:01:51AM -0700
References:  <355A2410.29E5EF72@cybcon.com> <19980514094522.A1526@ucb.crimea.ua> <355ADD2F.72B27EAB@cybcon.com>

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On Thu, May 14, 1998 at 05:01:51AM -0700, William Woods wrote:
>
> This is th output of pstat -T:
> 
> bash-2.01$ pstat -T
> 236/360 files
> 3M/199M swap space  

This means that your ``file'' table is 360 elements in size,
and that is almost full.

> 
> What should I do?

There are a number of ways:

1. The quick way

   The `maxusers' kernel parameter controls the static sizing of a number
   of internal system tables by a complicated formula defined in
   /sys/conf/param.c.

   MAXFILES=2*NPROC, this means: each process opens approximately 2 files;
   NPROC=20+16*MAXUSERS, this means: there is a 20 system processes, and
                                     16 processes for each user.

   In your case, the maxusers=10, thus, NPROC=180 and MAXFILES=360.

   So, just increase your ``maxusers'' parameter and recompile the kernel.

2. Tuning

   After ``config YOUR_KERNEL'', change to /sys/compile/YOUR_KERNEL
   and edit the formulas in param.c (it is copied to this directory from
   /sys/conf) for your taste.

   For example:

#define	NPROC (50 + 30 * MAXUSERS)
#define MAXFILES (NPROC*10)
   

-- 
Ruslan Ermilov          System Administrator
ru@ucb.crimea.ua        United Commercial Bank
+380-652-247647         Simferopol, Crimea
2426679                 ICQ Network, UIN

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