Hi. When my memory filled up, the Kernel didn't just pick a process at random. It started killing the processes that were eating up the memory. Kenny On Tue, Nov 12, 2002 at 02:22:03PM -0800, Tyler Spivey wrote: > well, i guess you'd have to have enough memory to hold the whole file. > that doesn't matter though, since the worst that can happen is that the > kernel will kill any old process when the ram and swap fill up. > i've had no swap, and my ram got filled and it killed anything - it picks a > number at random and kills it. > not very useful, just extreamly annoying - it should kill the process that > is eating up all the ram. > but now that we can add huge ammounts of swap space, this isn't a big issue > anymore. > just dd to a file with input from /dev/zero, run swapon, and if the file > gets filled reboot so the swapspace > isn't used, and trash it. > > > > _______________________________________________ > Speakup mailing list > Speakup at braille.uwo.ca > http://speech.braille.uwo.ca/mailman/listinfo/speakup >