On Fri, Jun 10, 2022 at 1:49 AM Steve Langasek
wrote:
> On Thu, Jun 09, 2022 at 01:00:45PM -0400, Nick Rosbrook wrote:
> > In the reports I refer to above, applications are being killed due to
> > (1). In practice, the SwapUsedLimit might be too easy to reach on
> > Ubuntu, largely because
On Thu, Jun 09, 2022 at 01:00:45PM -0400, Nick Rosbrook wrote:
> In the reports I refer to above, applications are being killed due to
> (1). In practice, the SwapUsedLimit might be too easy to reach on
> Ubuntu, largely because Ubuntu provides just 1GB of swap. Since we
> follow the suggestion of
The Ubuntu Error tracker recently moved from using one set of Cassandra
database servers to another in a different data center. Of course the
data was also moved between sets of servers but if you notice anything
odd please let me know!
Thanks,
--
Brian Murray
--
ubuntu-devel mailing list
On Thu, Jun 09, 2022 at 03:19:36PM -0400, Dan Streetman wrote:
> > 4. Increase swap on Ubuntu. I am adding this for completeness, but I
> > doubt this is a viable option.
> Personally, I think this is the correct option. 1GB is not a good
> default swap size.
Could you elaborate why? This
On Thu, Jun 9, 2022 at 3:03 PM Nick Rosbrook
wrote:
>
> Hi,
>
> During the 22.04 cycle, we enabled systemd-oomd [1] by default on
> desktop. Since then, there have been reports of systemd-oomd killing
> user applications too frequently (e.g. browsers, IDEs, and gnome-shell
> in some cases). In
Hi,
During the 22.04 cycle, we enabled systemd-oomd [1] by default on
desktop. Since then, there have been reports of systemd-oomd killing
user applications too frequently (e.g. browsers, IDEs, and gnome-shell
in some cases). In addition to a couple of LPs [2][3], I have heard
these reports by