Searched hist:174891 (Results 1 - 7 of 7) sorted by relevance

/freebsd-9.3-release/usr.bin/ipcs/
H A Dipc.h174891 Mon Dec 24 22:52:24 MST 2007 edwin Add the ability to clean up all shared memory segments which are
unused in one go.

From the original PR:

I've observed that linux apps running under the linuxulator
have a habit of leaving behind shared memory segments which
are unused, but which eventually cause the system to run
out of free segments and these apps will stop working.
ipcrm(1) currently only allows removal of unused message
queues, shared memory segments and semaphores on an individual
basis, or those having a matching (non-zero) key. However
it would often be convenient to just do a complete cleanup
of everything, usually as root.

PR: bin/118292
Submitted by: Callum Gibson <callumgibson@optusnet.com.au>
Not reviewed by: grog@
Approved by: grog@
H A Dipc.c174891 Mon Dec 24 22:52:24 MST 2007 edwin Add the ability to clean up all shared memory segments which are
unused in one go.

From the original PR:

I've observed that linux apps running under the linuxulator
have a habit of leaving behind shared memory segments which
are unused, but which eventually cause the system to run
out of free segments and these apps will stop working.
ipcrm(1) currently only allows removal of unused message
queues, shared memory segments and semaphores on an individual
basis, or those having a matching (non-zero) key. However
it would often be convenient to just do a complete cleanup
of everything, usually as root.

PR: bin/118292
Submitted by: Callum Gibson <callumgibson@optusnet.com.au>
Not reviewed by: grog@
Approved by: grog@
H A DMakefilediff 174891 Mon Dec 24 22:52:24 MST 2007 edwin Add the ability to clean up all shared memory segments which are
unused in one go.

From the original PR:

I've observed that linux apps running under the linuxulator
have a habit of leaving behind shared memory segments which
are unused, but which eventually cause the system to run
out of free segments and these apps will stop working.
ipcrm(1) currently only allows removal of unused message
queues, shared memory segments and semaphores on an individual
basis, or those having a matching (non-zero) key. However
it would often be convenient to just do a complete cleanup
of everything, usually as root.

PR: bin/118292
Submitted by: Callum Gibson <callumgibson@optusnet.com.au>
Not reviewed by: grog@
Approved by: grog@
H A Dipcs.cdiff 174891 Mon Dec 24 22:52:24 MST 2007 edwin Add the ability to clean up all shared memory segments which are
unused in one go.

From the original PR:

I've observed that linux apps running under the linuxulator
have a habit of leaving behind shared memory segments which
are unused, but which eventually cause the system to run
out of free segments and these apps will stop working.
ipcrm(1) currently only allows removal of unused message
queues, shared memory segments and semaphores on an individual
basis, or those having a matching (non-zero) key. However
it would often be convenient to just do a complete cleanup
of everything, usually as root.

PR: bin/118292
Submitted by: Callum Gibson <callumgibson@optusnet.com.au>
Not reviewed by: grog@
Approved by: grog@
/freebsd-9.3-release/usr.bin/ipcrm/
H A DMakefilediff 174891 Mon Dec 24 22:52:24 MST 2007 edwin Add the ability to clean up all shared memory segments which are
unused in one go.

From the original PR:

I've observed that linux apps running under the linuxulator
have a habit of leaving behind shared memory segments which
are unused, but which eventually cause the system to run
out of free segments and these apps will stop working.
ipcrm(1) currently only allows removal of unused message
queues, shared memory segments and semaphores on an individual
basis, or those having a matching (non-zero) key. However
it would often be convenient to just do a complete cleanup
of everything, usually as root.

PR: bin/118292
Submitted by: Callum Gibson <callumgibson@optusnet.com.au>
Not reviewed by: grog@
Approved by: grog@
H A Dipcrm.cdiff 174891 Mon Dec 24 22:52:24 MST 2007 edwin Add the ability to clean up all shared memory segments which are
unused in one go.

From the original PR:

I've observed that linux apps running under the linuxulator
have a habit of leaving behind shared memory segments which
are unused, but which eventually cause the system to run
out of free segments and these apps will stop working.
ipcrm(1) currently only allows removal of unused message
queues, shared memory segments and semaphores on an individual
basis, or those having a matching (non-zero) key. However
it would often be convenient to just do a complete cleanup
of everything, usually as root.

PR: bin/118292
Submitted by: Callum Gibson <callumgibson@optusnet.com.au>
Not reviewed by: grog@
Approved by: grog@
H A Dipcrm.1diff 174891 Mon Dec 24 22:52:24 MST 2007 edwin Add the ability to clean up all shared memory segments which are
unused in one go.

From the original PR:

I've observed that linux apps running under the linuxulator
have a habit of leaving behind shared memory segments which
are unused, but which eventually cause the system to run
out of free segments and these apps will stop working.
ipcrm(1) currently only allows removal of unused message
queues, shared memory segments and semaphores on an individual
basis, or those having a matching (non-zero) key. However
it would often be convenient to just do a complete cleanup
of everything, usually as root.

PR: bin/118292
Submitted by: Callum Gibson <callumgibson@optusnet.com.au>
Not reviewed by: grog@
Approved by: grog@

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