Markus Neteler wrote: > The next limit would be the operating system. Default Linux allows > 1024 files to be opened, which can be increased in > /etc/security/limits.conf
Note that, in 7.0, each raster map requires two open files: one for the cell/fcell file, one for the null bitmap. FWIW, on my system (Gentoo, nothing in limits.conf), the default soft limit is 1024 while the default hard limit is 4096, so the user can increase the soft limit to 4096 with "ulimit -n 4096" in the shell. Nikos Alexandris wrote: > Aren't there, however, any important side-effects in altering this limit? > There must be a (security?) reason for the number 2^10. The limits are just to prevent a process from (accidentally or deliberately) consuming too much memory. The descriptor table is in kernel memory, and can't be swapped to disk. Yann Chemin wrote: > In Ubuntu, I could expand the number of opened files by: ... > and reboot A reboot shouldn't be necessary. Changes to limits.conf should take effect for any subsequent logins. A hard limit can't be increased for any existing non-root processes, or those descended from them. Increasing a hard limit requires root privilege (or at least the CAP_SYS_RESOURCE capability), so the limits have to be set by the program which manages the login (login, xdm, sshd, etc) after the user has identified themself (so it knows which limits to set) but before the process changes its ownership from root to the logged-in user. -- Glynn Clements <gl...@gclements.plus.com> _______________________________________________ grass-dev mailing list grass-dev@lists.osgeo.org http://lists.osgeo.org/mailman/listinfo/grass-dev