The following reply was made to PR kern/120749; it has been noted by GNATS.

From: Peter Schuller <[email protected]>
To: Antony Mawer <[email protected]>, [email protected]
Cc: [email protected], [email protected]
Subject: Re: kern/120749: [request] Suggest upping the default 
        kern.ps_arg_cache_limit
Date: Tue, 18 May 2010 19:31:11 +0200

 > There was some recent comments that suggested this was beneficial with
 > various Tomcat/Java applications, which otherwise experienced their
 > command lines being truncated in the rc.d script for tomcat. What is
 > the trade of increasing this - increased memory usage?
 
 Tomcat/Java stuff is a great example of how many real-life command
 lines are much longer nowadays. As I originally stated, this is why I
 think a (to me, seemingly) more "modern" default is appropriate. Yes,
 it can be changed. But why should one have to, unless there is a clear
 disadvantage? (I do, and it doesn't affect me, but I am thinking of
 other people and new users.)
 
 I would be surprised if "ps auxww | grep X" not yielding output has
 not confused quite a lot of people, not neccessarly even aware that
 there is *a* limit, let alone how to change it.
 
 And as I said originally in the PR submission, I cannot speak to
 whether there are technical reasons other than memory use why this
 cannot be increased. But if the *only* issue is memory use, that seems
 like a complete non-issue to me given that even minimalistic simple C
 programs will typically depend on a stack size significantly larger
 than this. Again, even if the memory is in fact wired, it seems like a
 completely acceptable trade-off to me on any reasonable, modern,
 general-purpose system.
 
 I don't have any personal stake in this since I adjust the sysctl
 appropriately on all installations I manage, but I think this is an
 almost text book example of a seemingly small "detail" that may
 detract from the overall FreeBSD experience for new users in
 particular (and probably not-so-new users too).
 
 -- 
 / Peter Schuller
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