On Fri, Sep 15, 2006 at 02:25:45PM +0300, Sideris Michael wrote: > To tell you the truth I expressed myself incorrectly before. It is not > the user group but the login class. So, the user you log in with belongs > to the default login class. Normally you choose the login class when you > create the account. You can customize the "behavior" of each login class > by editing the /etc/login.conf file.
Yes I know that. But defaults are default:\ :path=/usr/bin /bin /usr/sbin /sbin /usr/X11R6/bin /usr/local/bin:\ :umask=022:\ :datasize-max=512M:\ :datasize-cur=512M:\ :maxproc-max=128:\ :maxproc-cur=64:\ :openfiles-cur=64:\ :stacksize-cur=4M:\ :localcipher=blowfish,6:\ :ypcipher=old:\ :tc=auth-defaults:\ :tc=auth-ftp-defaults: and it's not clear to me which limit to increase. Ofcourse I can change something, re-login and check what happed and I will do that later, but I want to understand this problem deeply. Why exacly after 10 forks() limit is exceeded? -- best regards q#