To resolve this problem, append this to the bottom of your /etc/security/limits.conf
mogile soft nofile 65535 mogile hard nofile 65535 Thanks for the pointer to the correct config file to tweak Dormando! Clint Twelve Horses Mobile Social Web Email Clinton Goudie-Nice Architect / Senior Software Engineer [EMAIL PROTECTED] Phone: +1.801.571.2665 ext 3264 Mobile: +1.801.915.0629 Fax: +1.801.571.2669 LinkedIn: http://www.linkedin.com/in/cgoudie Twelve Horses 13961 Minuteman Drive Suite 125 Draper, UT 84020 www.twelvehorses.com On Sun, 2008-03-16 at 20:45 -0700, dormando wrote: > That's based off of perlbal. > > Oddly enough, it doesn't appear that perlbal has the ability to increase > resources and drop user privileges? > > You can always give the mogstored user higher limits via > /etc/security/limits.conf (or whatever mechanics are local to you). > > -Dormando > > Clinton Goudie-Nice wrote: > > When I'm starting mogstored on my storage nodes, I'm seeing this error: > > > > ERROR: Need to be root to increase max connections. > > > > I'd really rather not run mogstored as root. Can I ignore this error > > (and if so, what are the ramifications?), or is there any way for me to > > circumvent the problem? > > > > This is on Centos5 nodes. > > > > Thanks! > > > > Clint > >
