The EntireX Broker is a multithreaded application and communicates among multiple tasks in memory pools. If you do not need to restrict the memory expansion of EntireX Broker, we strongly recommend you enable the dynamic memory management in order to handle changing workload appropriately. See Dynamic Memory Management below. If dynamic memory management is disabled, non-expandable memory is allocated during startup to store all internal control blocks and the contents of messages. This document covers the following topics:
Resource considerations apply to both the global and service-specific levels:
Dynamic assignment of global resources to services that need them prevents the return of a "Resource Shortage" code to an application when resources are available globally. It also enables the EntireX Broker to run with fewer total resources, although it does not guarantee the availability of a specific set of resources for a particular service.
Flow control ensures that individual services do not influence the behavior of other services by accident, error, or simply overload. This means that you can restrict the resource consumption of particular services in order to shield the other services.
In order to satisfy both global and service-specific requirements, the EntireX Broker allows you to allocate resources for each individual service or define global resources which are then allocated dynamically to any service that needs them.
The resources in question are the number of conversations, number of servers, plus units of work and the message storage, separated in a long buffer of 4096 bytes and short buffer of 256 bytes. These resources are typically the bottleneck in a system, especially when you consider that non-conversational communication is treated as the special case of "conversations with a single message only" within the EntireX Broker.
Global resources are defined by the parameters in the Broker section of the attribute file. The number of conversations allocated to each service is defined in the service-specific section of the attribute file. Because the conversations are shared by all servers that provide the service, a larger number of conversations should be allocated to services that are provided by more than one server. The number of conversations required is also affected by the number of clients accessing the service in parallel.
You can specify a set of global resources with no restrictions on which service allocates the resources:
Specify the global attributes with the desired values.
Do not specify any additional restrictions. That is, do not provide values for the following Broker-specific attributes:
LONG-BUFFER-DEFAULT
SHORT-BUFFER-DEFAULT
CONV-DEFAULT
SERVER-DEFAULT
Also, do not provide values for the following server-specific attributes:
LONG-BUFFER-LIMIT
SERVER-LIMIT
SHORT-BUFFER-LIMIT
CONV-LIMIT
The following example defines global resources. If no additional definitions are specified, resources are allocated and assigned to any server that needs them.
NUM-CONVERSATION=1000 NUM-LONG-BUFFER=200 NUM-SHORT-BUFFER=2000 NUM-SERVER=100
You can restrict resource allocation for particular services in advance:
Use CONV-LIMIT
to limit the resource consumption for
a specific service.
Use CONV-DEFAULT
to provide a default limit for
services for which CONV-LIMIT
is not
defined.
In the following example, attributes are used to restrict resource allocation:
DEFAULTS=BROKER NUM-CONVERSATION=1000 CONV-DEFAULT=200 DEFAULTS=SERVICE CLASS=A, SERVER=A, SERVICE=A, CONV-LIMIT=100 CLASS=B, SERVER=B, SERVICE=B, CONV-LIMIT=UNLIM CLASS=C, SERVER=C, SERVICE=C
Memory for a total of 1000 conversations is allocated
(NUM-CONVERSATION
=1000
).
Service A (CLASS
A
,SERVER
A
,SERVICE
A
) is limited to 100
conversation control blocks used simultaneously (CONV-LIMIT=100
). The
application that wants to start more conversations than specified by the limit
policy will receive a "Resource shortage" return code. This return
code should result in a retry of the desired operation a little later, when the
resource situation may have changed.
Service B (CLASS
B
,SERVER
B
,SERVICE
B
) is allowed to try to
allocate as many resources as necessary, provided the resources are available
and not occupied by other services. The number of conversations that may be
used by this service is unlimited (CONV-LIMIT=UNLIM
).
Service C (CLASS
C
,SERVER
C
,SERVICE
C
) has no explicit value
for the CONV-LIMIT
attribute. The number of
conversation control blocks that it is allowed to use is therefore limited to
the default value which is defined by the
CONV-DEFAULT
Broker attribute.
The same scheme applies to the allocation of message buffers and servers:
In the following example, long message buffers are allocated using the
keywords NUM-LONG-BUFFER
, LONG-BUFFER-DEFAULT
and LONG-BUFFER-LIMIT
:
DEFAULTS=BROKER NUM-LONG-BUFFER=2000 LONG-BUFFER-DEFAULT=250 DEFAULTS=SERVICE CLASS=A, SERVER=A, SERVICE=A, LONG-BUFFER-LIMIT=100 CLASS=B, SERVER=B, SERVICE=B, LONG-BUFFER-LIMIT=UNLIM CLASS=C, SERVER=C, SERVICE=C
In the following example, short message buffers are allocated using the
keywords NUM-SHORT-BUFFER
,
SHORT-BUFFER-DEFAULT
and
SHORT-BUFFER-LIMIT
:
DEFAULTS=BROKER NUM-SHORT-BUFFER=2000 SHORT-BUFFER-DEFAULT=250 DEFAULTS=SERVICE CLASS=A, SERVER=A, SERVICE=A, SHORT-BUFFER-LIMIT=100 CLASS=B, SERVER=B, SERVICE=B, SHORT-BUFFER-LIMIT=UNLIM CLASS=C, SERVER=C, SERVICE=C
In the following example, servers are allocated using the keywords
NUM-SERVER
, SERVER-DEFAULT
and
SERVER-LIMIT
:
DEFAULTS=BROKER NUM-SERVER=2000 SERVER-DEFAULT=250 DEFAULTS=SERVICE CLASS=A, SERVER=A, SERVICE=A, SERVER-LIMIT=100 CLASS=B, SERVER=B, SERVICE=B, SERVER-LIMIT=UNLIM CLASS=C, SERVER=C, SERVICE=C
If privileged services (services with access to unlimited resources)
exist, specify UNLIMITED
for the attributes
CONV-LIMIT
, SERVER-LIMIT
,
LONG-BUFFER-LIMIT
and SHORT-BUFFER-LIMIT
in
the service-specific section of the attribute file.
For example:
DEFAULTS=SERVICE CONV-LIMIT=UNLIM LONG-BUFFER-LIMIT=UNLIM SHORT-BUFFER-LIMIT=UNLIM SERVER-LIMIT=UNLIM
To ensure a resource reservoir for peak load of privileged services, define more resources than would normally be expected by specifying larger numbers for the Broker attributes that control global resources:
NUM-SERVER NUM-CONVERSATION CONV-DEFAULT LONG-BUFFER-DEFAULT SHORT-BUFFER-DEFAULT SERVER-DEFAULT
The maximum number of units of work (UOWs) that can be active
concurrently is specified in the Broker attribute file. The MAX-UOWS
attribute
can be specified for the Broker globally as well as for individual services. It
cannot be calculated automatically. If a service is intended to process UOWs, a
MAX-UOWS
value must be specified.
If message processing only is to be done, specify MAX-UOWS=0
(zero). The
Broker (or the service) will not accept units of work, that is, it will process
only messages that are not part of a UOW. Zero is used as the default value for
MAX-UOWS
in order to prevent the sending of UOWs to services that are not
intended to process them.
To ensure that each service runs without impacting other services, allow the EntireX Broker to calculate resource requirements automatically:
Ensure that the attributes that define the default total for the Broker
and the limit for each service are not set to UNLIM
.
Specify AUTO
for the Broker attribute that defines the total number of
the resource.
Specify a suitable value for the Broker attribute that defines the default number of the resource.
The total number required will be calculated from the number defined for each service. The resources that can be calculated this way are Number of Conversations, Number of Servers, Long Message Buffers and Short Message Buffers.
Avoid altering the service-specific definitions at runtime. Doing so
could corrupt the conversation consistency. Applications might receive a
message such as "NUM-CONVERSATIONS
reached" although the addressed
service does not serve as many conversations as defined. The same applies to
the attributes that define the long and short buffer resources.
Automatic resource calculation has the additional advantage of limiting the amount of memory used to run the EntireX Broker. Over time, you should be able to determine which services need more resources by noting the occurrence of the return code "resource shortage, please retry". You can then increase the resources for these services. To avoid disruption to the user, you could instead allocate a relatively large set of resources initially and then decrease the values using information gained from the Administration Monitor application.
To calculate the total number of conversations automatically, ensure that
the CONV-DEFAULT
Broker attribute and the
CONV-LIMIT
service-specific attribute are not set to UNLIM
anywhere in the attribute file. Specify NUM-CONVERSATION=AUTO
and an
appropriate value for the CONV-DEFAULT
Broker
attribute. The total number of conversations will be calculated using the value
specified for each service.
For example:
DEFAULTS=BROKER NUM-CONVERSATION=AUTO CONV-DEFAULT=200 DEFAULTS=SERVICE CLASS=A, SERVER=A, SERVICE=A CLASS=B, SERVER=B, SERVICE=B, CONV-LIMIT=100 CLASS=C, SERVER=C, SERVICE=C
Service A and Service C both need 200 conversations (the default
value). Service B needs 100 conversations
(CONV-LIMIT=100
).
Because NUM-CONVERSATIONS
is defined as
AUTO
, the broker calculates a total of 500 conversations (200 + 200 + 100).
NUM-CONVERSATIONS=AUTO
allows the number
of conversations to be flexible without requiring additional specifications. It
also ensures that the broker is started with enough resources to meet all
the demands of the individual services.
AUTO
and UNLIM
are mutually exclusive. If
CONV-DEFAULT
or a single
CONV-LIMIT
is defined as UNLIM
, the EntireX
Broker cannot determine the number of conversations to use in the calculation,
and the EntireX Broker cannot be started.
To calculate the number of servers automatically, ensure that the
SERVER-DEFAULT
Broker attribute and the
SERVER-LIMIT
service-specific attribute are not set to UNLIM
anywhere in the attribute file. Specify NUM-SERVER=AUTO
and an appropriate
value for the SERVER-DEFAULT
Broker attribute. The total number of server
buffers will be calculated using the value specified for each service.
For example:
DEFAULTS=BROKER NUM-SERVER=AUTO SERVER-DEFAULT=250 DEFAULTS=SERVICE CLASS=A, SERVER=A, SERVICE=A, SERVER-LIMIT=100 CLASS=B, SERVER=B, SERVICE=B CLASS=C, SERVER=C, SERVICE=C
To calculate the number of long message buffers automatically, ensure
that the LONG-BUFFER-DEFAULT
Broker attribute and the
LONG-BUFFER-LIMIT
service-specific attribute are not set to
UNLIM
anywhere in the attribute file. Specify NUM-LONG-BUFFER=AUTO
and an
appropriate value for the LONG-BUFFER-DEFAULT
Broker attribute. The total
number of long message buffers will be calculated using the value specified for
each service.
For example:
DEFAULTS=BROKER NUM-LONG-BUFFER=AUTO LONG-BUFFER-DEFAULT=250 DEFAULTS=SERVICE CLASS=A, SERVER=A, SERVICE=A, LONG-BUFFER-LIMIT=100 CLASS=B, SERVER=B, SERVICE=B CLASS=C, SERVER=C, SERVICE=C
To calculate the number of short message buffers automatically, ensure
that the SHORT-BUFFER-DEFAULT
Broker attribute and the
SHORT-BUFFER-LIMIT
service-specific attribute are not set to
UNLIM
anywhere in the attribute file. Specify NUM-SHORT-BUFFER=AUTO
and an
appropriate value for the SHORT-BUFFER-DEFAULT
Broker attribute. The total
number of short message buffers will be calculated using the value specified
for each service.
For example:
DEFAULTS=BROKER NUM-SHORT-BUFFER=AUTO SHORT-BUFFER-DEFAULT=250 DEFAULTS=SERVICE CLASS=A, SERVER=A, SERVICE=A CLASS=B, SERVER=B, SERVICE=B, SHORT-BUFFER-LIMIT=100 CLASS=C, SERVER=C, SERVICE=C
Dynamic memory management is a feature to handle changing Broker workload without any restart of the Broker task. It increases the availability of the Broker by using various memory pools for various Broker resources and by being able to use a variable number of pools for the resources.
If more memory is needed than currently available, another memory pool is allocated for the specific type of resource. If a particular memory pool is no longer used, it will be deallocated.
The following Broker attributes can be omitted if
DYNAMIC-MEMORY-MANAGEMENT=YES
has been
defined:
|
|
|
If you want statistics on allocation and deallocation operations in
Broker, you can configure Broker to create a storage report with the attribute
STORAGE-REPORT
.
See Storage Report below.
Note:
To ensure a stable environment, some pools of Broker are not deallocated automatically.
The first pools of type COMMUNICATION
, CONVERSATION
,
CONNECTION
, HEAP
, PARTICIPANT
,
PARTICIPANT EXTENSION
, SERVICE ATTRIBUTES
,
SERVICE
, SERVICE EXTENSION
,
TIMEOUT QUEUE
, TRANSLATION
, WORK QUEUE
are excluded from the automatic deallocation even when they have not been used for quite some time.
Large pools cannot be reallocated under some circumstances if the level of fragmentation in the address space has been increased
in the meantime.
Dynamic worker management is a feature to handle the fluctuating broker workload without restarting the Broker task.
It adjusts the number of running worker tasks according to current workload. The initial portion of worker tasks started
at Broker startup is still determined by NUM-WORKER
.
If more workers are needed than currently available, another worker task is started. If a worker task is no longer needed, it will be stopped.
The following Broker attributes are used for the configuration if
DYNAMIC-WORKER-MANAGEMENT=YES
has been defined:
WORKER-MAX
WORKER-MIN
WORKER-NONACT
WORKER-QUEUE-DEPTH
WORKER-START-DELAY
The following two attributes are very performance-sensitive:
Attribute WORKER-QUEUE-DEPTH
defines the number of unassigned user requests in the input queue before a new worker task is started.
Attribute WORKER-START-DELAY
defines the time between the last worker task startup and the next check for another possible worker task startup. It is
needed to consider the time for activating a worker task.
Both attributes depend on the environment, in particular the underlying operating system and the hardware. The goal is to achieve high-performance user request processing without starting too many worker tasks.
A good starting point to achieve high performance is not to change the attributes and to observe the performance of the application programs after activating the dynamic worker management.
If broker attribute DYNAMIC-WORKER-MANAGEMENT=YES
is set, operator commands are available under
z/OS to deactivate and subsequently reactivate dynamic worker management.
The following section illustrates the two different modes of dynamic worker management:
DYNAMIC-WORKER-MANAGEMENT=YES NUM-WORKER = 5 WORKER-MIN = 1 WORKER-MAX = 32
Broker is started with 5 worker tasks and then dynamically varies the number of worker tasks within the range from WORKER-MIN=1
to WORKER-MAX=32
due to DYNAMIC-WORKER-MANAGEMENT=YES
.
DYNAMIC-WORKER-MANAGEMENT=NO NUM-WORKER = 5 WORKER-MIN = 1 WORKER-MAX = 32
Broker is started with 5 worker tasks. The WORKER-MIN/MAX
attributes are ignored due to DYNAMIC-WORKER-MANAGEMENT=NO
.
You can create an optional report file that provides details about all activities to allocate or to deallocate memory pools. This section details how to create the report and provides a sample report.
See also Broker-specific attribute
STORAGE-REPORT
.
Use Broker's global attribute
STORAGE-REPORT
with the value
YES
. If attribute value
YES
is supplied, all memory pool operations will
be reported if the output mechanism is available. If the value
NO
is specified, no report will be created.
DDNAME ETBSREP
assigns the report file. Format
RECFM=FB, LRECL=121
is used.
Broker creates a file with the name
STORAGE.REPORT in the current working directory. If the
environment variable ETB_STORAGE_REPORT
is
supplied, the file name specified in the environment variable will be used. If
Broker receives the command-line argument -r
, the token following
argument -r
will be used as the file name.
LINK-NAME ETBSREP
assigns the report file. Format REC-FORM=V,
REC-SIZE=0, FILE-TYPE ISAM
is used by default.
The following is an excerpt from a sample STORAGE report.
EntireX 8.1.0.00 STORAGE Report 2009-06-26 12:28:58 Page 1 Identifier Address Size Total Date Time Action KERNEL POOL 0x25E48010 407184 bytes 407184 bytes 2009-06-26 12:28:58.768 Allocated HEAP POOL 0x25EB4010 1050692 bytes 1457876 bytes 2009-06-26 12:28:58.769 Allocated COMMUNICATION POOL 0x25FB5010 16781380 bytes 18239256 bytes 2009-06-26 12:28:58.769 Allocated ACCOUNTING POOL 0x26FB7010 762052 bytes 19001308 bytes 2009-06-26 12:28:58.769 Allocated BROKER POOL 0x27072010 61540 bytes 19062848 bytes 2009-06-26 12:28:58.775 Allocated CONVERSATION POOL 0x27082010 368964 bytes 19431812 bytes 2009-06-26 12:28:58.775 Allocated CONNECTION POOL 0x270DD010 233668 bytes 19665480 bytes 2009-06-26 12:28:58.779 Allocated LONG MESSAGES POOL 0x27117010 4395204 bytes 24060684 bytes 2009-06-26 12:28:58.782 Allocated SHORT MESSAGES POOL 0x27549010 3703876 bytes 27764560 bytes 2009-06-26 12:28:58.806 Allocated PARTICIPANT POOL 0x278D2010 134244 bytes 27898804 bytes 2009-06-26 12:28:58.827 Allocated PARTICIPANT EXTENSION POOL 0x278F3010 36996 bytes 27935800 bytes 2009-06-26 12:28:58.829 Allocated PROXY QUEUE POOL 0x278FD010 26724 bytes 27962524 bytes 2009-06-26 12:28:58.829 Allocated SERVICE ATTRIBUTES POOL 0x27904010 131668 bytes 28094192 bytes 2009-06-26 12:28:58.829 Allocated SERVICE POOL 0x27925010 54372 bytes 28148564 bytes 2009-06-26 12:28:58.830 Allocated SERVICE EXTENSION POOL 0x27933010 32900 bytes 28181464 bytes 2009-06-26 12:28:58.831 Allocated TIMEOUT QUEUE POOL 0x2793C010 87268 bytes 28268732 bytes 2009-06-26 12:28:58.831 Allocated TRANSLATION POOL 0x27952010 179300 bytes 28448032 bytes 2009-06-26 12:28:58.832 Allocated UNIT OF WORK POOL 0x2797E010 176324 bytes 28624356 bytes 2009-06-26 12:28:58.834 Allocated WORK QUEUE POOL 0x279AA010 391268 bytes 29015624 bytes 2009-06-26 12:28:58.835 Allocated BLACKLIST POOL 0x27A0A010 42084 bytes 29057708 bytes 2009-06-26 12:28:58.838 Allocated COMMUNICATION POOL 0x25FB5010 16781380 bytes 12837332 bytes 2009-06-26 12:30:58.514 Deallocated ACCOUNTING POOL 0x26FB7010 762052 bytes 12075280 bytes 2009-06-26 12:30:58.515 Deallocated BROKER POOL 0x27072010 61540 bytes 12013740 bytes 2009-06-26 12:30:58.516 Deallocated CONVERSATION POOL 0x27082010 368964 bytes 11644776 bytes 2009-06-26 12:30:58.518 Deallocated CONNECTION POOL 0x270DD010 233668 bytes 11411108 bytes 2009-06-26 12:30:58.519 Deallocated LONG MESSAGES POOL 0x27117010 4395204 bytes 7015904 bytes 2009-06-26 12:30:58.520 Deallocated SHORT MESSAGES POOL 0x27549010 3703876 bytes 3312028 bytes 2009-06-26 12:30:58.526 Deallocated PROXY QUEUE POOL 0x278FD010 26724 bytes 3285304 bytes 2009-06-26 12:30:58.530 Deallocated TIMEOUT QUEUE POOL 0x2793C010 87268 bytes 2690464 bytes 2009-06-26 12:30:58.532 Deallocated UNIT OF WORK POOL 0x2797E010 176324 bytes 2514140 bytes 2009-06-26 12:30:58.533 Deallocated WORK QUEUE POOL 0x279AA010 391268 bytes 2122872 bytes 2009-06-26 12:30:58.533 Deallocated BLACKLIST POOL 0x27A0A010 42084 bytes 2080788 bytes 2009-06-26 12:30:58.534 Deallocated PARTICIPANT POOL 0x278D2010 134244 bytes 1893112 bytes 2009-06-26 12:49:25.817 Deallocated PARTICIPANT EXTENSION POOL 0x278F3010 36996 bytes 1856116 bytes 2009-06-26 12:49:25.818 Deallocated SERVICE ATTRIBUTES POOL 0x27904010 131668 bytes 1724448 bytes 2009-06-26 12:49:25.818 Deallocated SERVICE POOL 0x27925010 54372 bytes 1670076 bytes 2009-06-26 12:49:25.818 Deallocated SERVICE EXTENSION POOL 0x27933010 32900 bytes 1637176 bytes 2009-06-26 12:49:25.819 Deallocated TRANSLATION POOL 0x27952010 179300 bytes 1457876 bytes 2009-06-26 12:49:25.819 Deallocated HEAP POOL 0x25EB4010 1050692 bytes 407184 bytes 2009-06-26 12:49:25.820 Deallocated KERNEL POOL 0x25E48010 407184 bytes 0 bytes 2009-06-26 12:49:25.820 Deallocated
Header | Description |
---|---|
Identifier | Name of the memory pool. |
Address | Start address of the memory pool. |
Size | Size of the memory pool. |
Total | Total size of all obtained memory pools. |
Date, Time | Date and time of the action. |
Action | The action of Broker. The following actions are currently supported:
Allocated: memory pool is allocated. Deallocated: memory pool is deallocated. |
This table shows the generated maximum number of TCP/IP connections per communicator. See also:
Platform | Maximum Number of TCP/IP Connections per Communicator |
---|---|
BS2000 | 2,048 |
Linux | 65,534 |
Windows | 4,096 |
z/OS | 16,384 |
With the Broker-specific attribute POLL
, these restrictions can be lifted under z/OS and Linux.
See POLL
.
The number of communicators multiplied by the maximum number of connections cannot exceed the maximum number of file descriptors per process.
See also MAX-CONNECTIONS
under TCP-OBJECT (Struct INFO_TCP)
under Broker CIS Data Structures in the ACI Programming documentation.
Under z/OS, the following message may appear in the broker log:
ETBD0286 Diagnostic Values: accept: 124, EDC5124I Too many open files.errno2: 84607302 050B0146
The most common reason for this TCP/IP Communicator diagnostic message is the limitation of open files per user.
The value of MAXFILEPROC
in the BPXPRM00
parmlib
member should be greater than the expected number of TCP/IP connections.
Under Linux, setting the maximum open file limit depends on your working environment:
In the bash shell you can display or change the limits with the command ulimit -n
.
These limits are used when the Broker (etbnuc) is started from the command line or from a cron job.
The limits can be stored, for example, in the file /etc/security/limits.conf.
For all users:
* soft nofile 1024 * hard nofile 8192
For user entirex:
entirex soft nofile 8192 entirex hard nofile 100000
Broker uses the soft limit. When this limit is reached, no more connections are possible. If the hard limit is higher than the soft limit, you can increase the limit - without having to stop the broker - using the following command:
#> prlimit --pid <pid> --nofile = 4096:8192
The maximum limit in the broker for POLL=NO
is 65534.
POLL=YES
is not subject to any limit and is dependent only on the soft limit of the system.
If the broker is controlled by a service that was started by systemd
, the limits of systemd
apply.
There are various ways of increasing the limits if you need more than 4096 connections:
Set DefaultLimitNOFILE
in the files /etc/systemd/system.conf or /etc/systemd/user.conf.
Insert LimitNOFILE=<new-limit>
in a service file /usr/lib/systemd/system/sag<n>exx<vers>.
Example:
# -----------------------------------------------------------------------------
# Copyright (c) 2014-2022 Software AG, Darmstadt, Germany and/or Software AG
# USA Inc., Reston, VA, USA, and/or its subsidiaries and/or its affiliates
# and/or their licensors.
# Use, reproduction, transfer, publication or disclosure is prohibited except
# as specifically provided for in your License Agreement with Software AG.
# -----------------------------------------------------------------------------
# do not modify this line
[Unit]
Description=sag7exx109
After=multi-user.target
[Service]
Type=forking
RemainAfterExit=yes
PrivateTmp=no
KillMode=none
TimeoutStartSec=330
TimeoutStopSec=330
LimitNOFILE=32000
User=rdsadmin
Group=rdstst
ExecStart=/bin/sh -c "/opt/testenv/exx/109/installed/EntireX/bin/sagexx109 start"
ExecStop=/bin/sh -c "/opt/testenv/exx/109/installed/EntireX/bin/sagexx109 stop"
PIDFile=/opt/testenv/exx/v109/installed/EntireX/bin/sagexx109.pid
[Install]
WantedBy=multi-user.target
You can check the current settings using the proc file system:
#> cat /proc/<etbnuc-pid>/limits Limit Soft Limit Hard Limit Units Max cpu time unlimited unlimited seconds Max file size unlimited unlimited bytes Max data size unlimited unlimited bytes Max stack size 8388608 unlimited bytes Max core file size 0 unlimited bytes Max resident set unlimited unlimited bytes Max processes 15709 15709 processes Max open files 32000 32000 files Max locked memory 65536 65536 bytes Max address space unlimited unlimited bytes Max file locks unlimited unlimited locks Max pending signals 15709 15709 signals Max msgqueue size 819200 819200 bytes Max nice priority 0 0 Max realtime priority 0 0 Max realtime timeout unlimited unlimited us