On Tue, 2014-04-01 at 14:48 -0700, Andrew Morton wrote:
> On Tue, 1 Apr 2014 17:41:54 -0400 KOSAKI Motohiro <kosaki.motoh...@gmail.com> 
> wrote:
> 
> > >> > Hmmm so 0 won't really work because it could be weirdly used to disable
> > >> > shm altogether... we cannot go to some negative value either since 
> > >> > we're
> > >> > dealing with unsigned, and cutting the range in half could also hurt
> > >> > users that set the limit above that. So I was thinking of simply 
> > >> > setting
> > >> > SHMMAX to ULONG_MAX and be done with it. Users can then set it manually
> > >> > if they want a smaller value.
> > >> >
> > >> > Makes sense?
> > >>
> > >> I don't think people use 0 for disabling. but ULONG_MAX make sense to me 
> > >> too.
> > >
> > > Distros could have set it to [U]LONG_MAX in initscripts ten years ago
> > > - less phone calls, happier customers.  And they could do so today.
> > >
> > > But they haven't.   What are the risks of doing this?
> > 
> > I have no idea really. But at least I'm sure current default is much worse.
> > 
> > 1. Solaris changed the default to total-memory/4 since Solaris 10 for DB.
> >  http://www.postgresql.org/docs/9.1/static/kernel-resources.html
> > 
> > 2. RHEL changed the default to very big size since RHEL5 (now it is
> > 64GB). Even tough many box don't have 64GB memory at that time.
> 
> Ah-hah, that's interesting info.
> 
> Let's make the default 64GB?

But again, yet another arbitrary value...

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