Le 20/08/2022 à 10:20, Martin Steigerwald a écrit :
oomd may make sense in certain cloud based workloads, maybe, just maybe.
However… on a desktop? You are frigging kidding me, aren't you?

    Well, it can happen to anybody to write an application which leaks memory. The oom killer is automatically launched by the kernel when memory pressure is too high, and it is a necessity. The problem here is with systemd's oom killer, and/or with Gnome.

--     Didier

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