ulimit

Chris Torek chris at mimsy.UUCP
Sat Apr 22 01:15:39 AEST 1989


The mistake is not the existence of ulimit (although there are those
who would argue this as well).  The mistake is that the default limit
is set to such a tiny value.  If the default limit were, say, 100
exabytes,% it would not be such a problem.

The default file size limit should be `unlimited'; sysadmins should
be able to raise and lower it, and users should be able to lower it.

-----
% This is not `100 8mm tape drives': `exa' is a metric unit.  If I have
  not got them backwards, the order is kilo, mega, giga, tera, peta,
  exa.  (In the other direction we have milli, micro, nano, pico,
  femto, atto.  These are abbreviated as k/M/G/T/P/E and m/u/n/p/f/a
  respectively.  And `b' is bits; `B' is bytes; `mb' is millibits.
  But I see my footnote has digressed.)
-- 
In-Real-Life: Chris Torek, Univ of MD Comp Sci Dept (+1 301 454 7163)
Domain:	chris at mimsy.umd.edu	Path:	uunet!mimsy!chris



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