It seems that the recommended way to set stack size for a C program or Ruby program (which uses the C stack), is by using ulimit
in the Bash shell. But
$ ulimit -s 8192 $ ulimit -s 16384 -bash: ulimit: stack size: cannot modify limit: Operation not permitted
and sudo
doesn't help either. Is there a way to set it to 16MB, 32MB, or 64MB? I thought there should be a way to set it per program invocation instead of setting a system wide parameter as well?
Right now 8192
probably means 8MB which is quite small, if that is compared to how much a process can be using, sometimes as much as 2GB of RAM.
(updated note: ulimit -a
can show its current values).
(update 2: it actually seems like ulimit -s <value>
is per shell, and that if you set it the first time, it usually works. The problem is when you set it the second time, then it may return an error)
Apparently there is a hard limit on the stack size for mac os x, taken from http://lists.apple.com/archives/scitech/2004/Oct/msg00124.html granted this is quite old, and Im not sure if its still true anymore, but to set it simply call ulimit -s hard, its 65532. or about 65 megs.
I did some tests on snow leopard, 10.6.8, and it does seem to be true.
$ ulimit -a ... stack size (kbytes, -s) 8192 ... $ ulimit -s 65533 -bash: ulimit: stack size: cannot modify limit: Operation not permitted $ ulimit -s 65532 $
I also found this http://linuxtoosx.blogspot.com/2010/10/stack-overflow-increasing-stack-limit.html though I haven't test it, so can't really say much about it.
When applications consume gigs of memory thats usually taken from the heap, the stack is usually reserve for local automatic variables that exist for a relatively small amount of time equivalent to the lifespan of the function call, the heap is where most of the persistent data lives.
here is a quick tutorial:
#include <stdlib.h> #define NUMBER_OF_BYTES 10000000 // about 10 megs void test() { char stack_data[NUMBER_OF_BYTES]; // allocating on the stack. char *heap_data = malloc(NUMBER_OF_BYTES); // pointer (heap_data) lives on the stack, the actual data lives on the heap. } int main() { test(); // at this point stack_data[NUMBER_OF_BYTES] and *heap_data have being removed, but malloc(NUMBER_OF_BYTES) persists. // depending on the calling convention either main or test are responssible for resetting the stack. // on most compilers including gcc, the caller (main) is responssible. return 0; } $ ulimit -a ... stack size (kbytes, -s) 8192 ... $ gcc m.c $ ./a.out Segmentation fault $ ulimit -s hard $ ./a.out $
ulimit is only temporary you would have to update it every time, or update your corresponding bash script to set it automatically.
Once ulimit is set it can only be lowered never raised.
To my mind the accepted answer is not totally right and leads to miss comprehension, more specifically the last statement is not true.
Once ulimit is set it can only be lowered never raised.
There are indeed soft (displayable with ulimit -s
or ulimit -Ss
) and hard (displayable with ulimit -Hs
) limits. But while setting the limit through ulimit -s
will affect soft and hard values.
Once hard limit is set it can only be lowered never raise, but soft limit can be lowered or raised provided that the value stays lower than the hard limit.
This will work:
# base values $ ulimit -s 100 $ ulimit -Hs 100 $ ulimit -Ss 100 # lower soft limit only $ ulimit -Ss 50 $ ulimit -s 50 $ ulimit -Hs 100 $ ulimit -Ss 50 # raise soft limit only $ ulimit -Ss 100 $ ulimit -s 100 $ ulimit -Hs 100 $ ulimit -Ss 100 # lower soft and hard limit $ ulimit -s 50 $ ulimit -s 50 $ ulimit -Hs 50 $ ulimit -Ss 50 # then impossible to raise soft limit due to hard limit $ ulimit -s 100 -bash: ulimit: stack size: cannot modify limit: Operation not permitted $ ulimit -Ss 100 -bash: ulimit: stack size: cannot modify limit: Invalid argument
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