Manual:$wgMaxShellMemory
Shell and process control: $wgMaxShellMemory | |
---|---|
Maximum amount of virtual memory available to shell processes under Linux, in KiB. |
|
Introducido en la versión: | 1.7.0 (r14795) |
Eliminado en la versión: | aún se usa |
Valores permitidos: | (integer) |
Valor predeterminado: | 307200 (1.22+) gerrit:91833102400 (1.7-1.21) |
Otras configuraciones: Alfabéticamente | Por Función |
Predeterminado
// Maximum amount of virtual memory available to shell processes under Linux, in KiB.
$wgMaxShellMemory = 307200;
1 KiB = 1024 B, 102400 KiB = 100 MiB, 307200 KiB = 300 MiB, etc.
Detalles
Under Linux, shell commands are executed with the time and memory limits given by $wgMaxShellTime
and $wgMaxShellMemory
. Setting either variable to 0 will disable both limits.
If generating thumbnails with ImageMagick fails with a web server error log message like "Memory allocation failed" or "/bin/ulimit4.sh: Segmentation fault /usr/bin/convert ..." or "convert: Unable to extend cache ...", the $wgMaxShellMemory
value may need to be increased.
If using Batik to render SVG graphics on some systems, this value needs to be raised in order for the extension to function. (The phrase "Could not create the Java virtual machine." may appear in Apache error log if this problem is occurring.)
Véase también
- $wgMaxShellFileSize - Maximum file size created by shell processes under linux
- $wgMaxShellTime - Maximum time allowance for Linux shell processes
- $wgShellCgroup - Use cgroups instead of ulimit -v to control memory usage, which is more reliable.