Albe Laurenz <laurenz.albe@xxxxxxxxxx> writes: > Bill Moran wrote: >> What I feel is the best way to mitigate the situation, is to have some >> setting that limits the maximum RAM any backend can consume. > I'd delegate that problem to the operating system which, after all, > should know best of all how much memory a process uses. I've had some success using ulimit in the past, although it does have the disadvantage that you have to impose the same limit on every PG process. (You set it before starting the postmaster and it inherits to every child process.) If memory serves, limiting with the -v switch works better than -d or -m on Linux; but I might be misremembering. Conceivably we could add code to let the ulimit be set per-process, if the use-case were strong enough. To implement a limit inside PG, we'd have to add expensive bookkeeping to the palloc/pfree mechanism, and even that would be no panacea because it would fail to account for memory allocated directly from malloc. Hence, you could be pretty certain that it would be wildly inaccurate for sessions using third-party code such as PostGIS or Python. An OS-enforced limit definitely sounds better from here. regards, tom lane -- Sent via pgsql-general mailing list (pgsql-general@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx) To make changes to your subscription: http://www.postgresql.org/mailpref/pgsql-general