Date: Sun, 11 Oct 2009 17:29:27 GMT From: Edward Tomasz Napierala <trasz@FreeBSD.org> To: Perforce Change Reviews <perforce@freebsd.org> Subject: PERFORCE change 169409 for review Message-ID: <200910111729.n9BHTRdY061009@repoman.freebsd.org>
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http://perforce.freebsd.org/chv.cgi?CH=169409 Change 169409 by trasz@trasz_victim on 2009/10/11 17:28:33 Fix language errors. Affected files ... .. //depot/projects/soc2009/trasz_limits/usr.sbin/hrl/hrl.8#2 edit Differences ... ==== //depot/projects/soc2009/trasz_limits/usr.sbin/hrl/hrl.8#2 (text+ko) ==== @@ -76,10 +76,10 @@ Syntax for a rule is subject:subject-id:resource:action=amount/per. .Pp Subject defines the kind of entity the rule applies to. -It can be either process, user, group, loginclass, or jail. +It can be either process, user, group, login class, or jail. .Pp Subject ID identifies the subject. It can be user name, group name, -loginclass name, or a numerical UID, GID, or JID. +login class name, or a numerical UID, GID, or JID. .Pp Resource identifies the resource the rule controls. .Pp @@ -92,19 +92,21 @@ .Pp The per field defines what entity the limit gets accounted for. For example, rule "loginclass:users:memoryuse:deny=100M/process" means -that each process of a user belonging to loginclass "users" may use up to 100MB +that each process of any user belonging to login class "users" may use up to 100MB of memory. Rule "loginclass:users:memoryuse:deny=100M/user" would mean that the sum of -memory used by all processes of that user will not exceed 100MB. +memory used by all processes of any user belonging to the login class "users" +will not exceed 100MB. Rule "loginclass:users:memoryuse:deny=100M/loginclass" would mean that the sum of -memory used by all processes of all users with that loginclass will not exceed 100MB. +memory used by all processes of all users belonging to that login class will +not exceed 100MB. .Pp Valid rule has all of these fields specified, except for the per, which defaults to the value of subject. .Pp A filter is a rule for which one of more fields other than per is left empty. For example, a filter that matches every rule could be written as ":::=/", -or, in short, ":". A filter that matchess all the login classes would be +or, in short, ":". A filter that matches all the login classes would be "loginclass:". A filter that matches all defined limits for maxprocesses resource would be "::maxprocesses". .Sh EXIT STATUS
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