Re: alarm_handler doc

2020-07-13 Thread Joan Touzet
This is coming from the Erlang VM and telling you that you're nearly out 
of available memory. CouchDB doesn't react well to running out of RAM; 
it usually crashes.


While this warning will be suppressed in future versions of CouchDB, you 
should probably check that you have enough RAM in your CouchDB 
server/container/VM/etc.


On 2020-07-13 6:23 p.m., Arturo Mardones wrote:

Hello at All!

I'm getting this message very often

[info] 2020-07-13T21:19:09.240457Z couchdb@127.0.0.1 <0.56.0> 
alarm_handler: {set,{system_memory_high_wa
termark,[]}}

I've reviewed some older mails and mention that is not important, and even
is related to the client browser cache?

Anyone can give me some link or light about if I really can discard this
message, and what really means

Thanks!!!

Arturo.



alarm_handler doc

2020-07-13 Thread Arturo Mardones
Hello at All!

I'm getting this message very often

[info] 2020-07-13T21:19:09.240457Z couchdb@127.0.0.1 <0.56.0> 
alarm_handler: {set,{system_memory_high_wa
termark,[]}}

I've reviewed some older mails and mention that is not important, and even
is related to the client browser cache?

Anyone can give me some link or light about if I really can discard this
message, and what really means

Thanks!!!

Arturo.

-- 

http://animaldelared.blogspot.com


Re: Is this mailing list obsolete now?

2020-07-13 Thread Jan Lehnardt



> On 12. Jul 2020, at 22:07, Miles Fidelman  wrote:
> 
> Well, as a user, I kind of find that the move to a github discussion is not 
> at all helpful.  Email lists are a time-proven mechanism - why break what 
> ain't broke.

This mailing list isn’t going anywhere.

Best
Jan
—
> 
> Miles Fidelman
> 
> On 7/12/20 3:43 PM, Kiril Stankov wrote:
>> Hi,
>> 
>> I see that some topics on the list are not in the github discussions and
>> vice versa?
>> 
>> Shall we all consider the mailing list obsolete and move to github?
>> 
>> Is there a way to get summaries from github or other kind of
>> notifications by email?
>> 
>> Cheers,
>> 
>> Kiril.
> 
> -- 
> In theory, there is no difference between theory and practice.
> In practice, there is.   Yogi Berra
> 
> Theory is when you know everything but nothing works.
> Practice is when everything works but no one knows why.
> In our lab, theory and practice are combined:
> nothing works and no one knows why.  ... unknown
>