Here is a technique to keep you from creating large files (which can happen by accident, such as runaway programs). To set a maximum file size, use the C shell command (usually in your
.cshrc
file)
limit filesize
max-size
.
In the Korn shell and
bash
, use
ulimit -f
max-size
. You can change the limit from the command line, too. For example, the
csh
and
ksh
commands below keep you from creating any files larger than 2 megabytes:
%limit filesize 2m
$ulimit -f 2000
With this command, UNIX will refuse to allocate more disk space to any file that grows larger than 2 MB.
Similarly, on Berkeley systems, you can use limit and ulimit to restrict the size of core dump files ( 52.9 ) . Core dumps are generally large files and are often generated for innocuous reasons, such as invoking commands incorrectly. To set a maximum size for core dumps, execute one of these commands:
%limit coredumpsize
max-size
$ulimit -c
max-size
To eliminate core dumps entirely, use
0
(zero) for
max-size
. Because core dumps are essential for effective debugging, any users who are actively
debugging programs should know the commands
unlimit coredumpsize
, which removes this restriction in
csh
-and
ulimit -c unlimited
for
bash
and
ksh
.
- from O'Reilly & Associates' System Performance Tuning , Chapter 5