Darren New wrote:
Of course, your OS can still screw you up, like back when Linux would let you allocate nonexistent memory and then just kill -9 you when you tried to use it. (Which was fixed pretty quickly after, I'll note. :-)
This isn't really "fixed". Sure the determination of what gets killed is more sophisticated, but you can still allocate nonexistent memory (well, unless you set your sysctl parameters a certain way) and cause a process to die when you tried to use it.

--Chris

--
[email protected]
http://www.kernel-panic.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/kplug-lpsg

Reply via email to