This may also help:
http://unix.stackexchange.com/questions/153585/how-oom-killer-decides-which-process-to-kill-first

2015-05-03 11:39 GMT+03:00 E.S. Rosenberg <
es.rosenberg+sailfishos....@gmail.com>:

> I think it's the regular linux OOM killer, in general it doesn't kill
> everything but it will/should kill up to the point that enough RAM was
> freed to regain system stability...
> So if your deamon has a very small RAM footprint the chance it will get
> killed is much lower then if it's a RAM hog...
>
> HTH,
> Eli
>
> 2015-05-03 8:08 GMT+03:00 Taixzo <tai...@gmail.com>:
>
>> I notice that Sailfish tends to close all running applications when some
>> limit of RAM or CPU is reached. Is there a way to make an app launch a
>> daemon process that does not get killed by this?
>>
>>
>> --
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>
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