It says:
@4000000055a8092e00454854 ./run: 7: ulimit: Illegal option -r
I'm using Ubuntu 14.04LTS 64-bit server edition. It has no man page for ulimit but my own Ubuntu 12.04 on my laptop does. It said args to that are UL_GETFSIZE and UL_SETFSIZE. So I tried adding
ulimit UL_SETFSIZE 2
before my exec but it said:
@4000000055a80a732330e364 ./run: 7: ulimit: too many arguments
This is not a huge deal since the ITHB vm works, I just thought you might have already succeeded with HT and "knew the trick" to it..
On Thu, Jul 16, 2015 at 1:39 PM, Levente Uzonyi leves@elte.hu wrote:
This should work, because the daemontools start script is executed by root. I assume that it's enough to the highest priority to 2, so the following should work:
ulimit -r 2 exec setuidgid <account> <ht_vm_executable> <image> ...
Levente
On Wed, 15 Jul 2015, Eliot Miranda wrote:
Hi Chris, On Wed, Jul 15, 2015 at 9:17 AM, Chris Muller ma.chris.m@gmail.com wrote: On Sat, Jul 11, 2015 at 4:30 PM, Eliot Miranda eliot.miranda@gmail.com wrote: > Hi Chris, > > I really know very little about this. I don't understand the mechanism. But I'm told that the limits file takes effect on login. i.e. if the file is created while a user is logged in it won't take effect for that user until that user logs out and logs back in again and only applies to those sessions that logged in once the file had been created. I /dont/ know whether su sets up a new session. i should try that experiment. > > So perhaps you could have daemon tools run login or su to create a new session and see if the ht version can be run by daemontools in that session. Presumably daemons launched at boot aren't in the right state. (What an absurdity they've invented here).
Good suggestion to try, unfortunately it didn't work. I tried
logging in as root to see if it would "initialize" that account to have those permissions, then logging out and starting the daemon. Same error.
See http://superuser.com/questions/454465/make-ulimits-work-with-start-stop-daem.... Apparently
"At this time, you can't. limits.conf(5) is the configuration for pam_limits(8), which is activated by the PAM stack according to the configuration in /etc/pam.d. However, start-stop-daemon(8) as launched from an init.d script doesn't pass through the PAM stack, so those kinds of settings are never applied.
Debian bug #302079 contains a patch to enable setting limits from start-stop-daemon(8), but the bug has been open since 2005 and the patch hasn't been merged yet.
While not ideal, AFAIK the recommended way to accomplish this right now is to add a ulimitcall in your init.d script."
Looks like this is settable via ulimit -r; From man ulimit(1) (actually from bash (1)) -r The maximum real-time scheduling priority
Of course this may not work:
ulimit -r 3$ -bash: ulimit: real-time priority: cannot modify limit: Operation not permitted
But it's worth a try.
For the sake of progress, I've switched to using the ITHB vm.
-- best,Eliot