getrlimit(2) — Linux manual page

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getrlimit(2) System Calls Manual getrlimit(2)

NAME top

 getrlimit, setrlimit, prlimit - get/set resource limits

LIBRARY top

 Standard C library (libc, -lc)

SYNOPSIS top

 #include <sys/resource.h>
 int getrlimit(int resource, struct rlimit *rlim);
 int setrlimit(int resource, const struct rlimit *rlim);
 int prlimit(pid_t pid, int resource,
 const struct rlimit *_Nullable new_limit,
 struct rlimit *_Nullable old_limit);
 struct rlimit {
 rlim_t rlim_cur; /* Soft limit */
 rlim_t rlim_max; /* Hard limit (ceiling for rlim_cur) */
 };
 typedef /* ... */ rlim_t; /* Unsigned integer type */
 Feature Test Macro Requirements for glibc (see
 feature_test_macros(7)):
 prlimit():
 _GNU_SOURCE

DESCRIPTION top

 The getrlimit() and setrlimit() system calls get and set resource
 limits. Each resource has an associated soft and hard limit, as
 defined by the rlimit structure.
 The soft limit is the value that the kernel enforces for the
 corresponding resource. The hard limit acts as a ceiling for the
 soft limit: an unprivileged process may set only its soft limit to
 a value in the range from 0 up to the hard limit, and
 (irreversibly) lower its hard limit. A privileged process (under
 Linux: one with the CAP_SYS_RESOURCE capability in the initial
 user namespace) may make arbitrary changes to either limit value.
 The value RLIM_INFINITY denotes no limit on a resource (both in
 the structure returned by getrlimit() and in the structure passed
 to setrlimit()).
 The resource argument must be one of:
 RLIMIT_AS
 This is the maximum size of the process's virtual memory
 (address space). The limit is specified in bytes, and is
 rounded down to the system page size. This limit affects
 calls to brk(2), mmap(2), and mremap(2), which fail with
 the error ENOMEM upon exceeding this limit. In addition,
 automatic stack expansion fails (and generates a SIGSEGV
 that kills the process if no alternate stack has been made
 available via sigaltstack(2)). Since the value is a long,
 on machines with a 32-bit long either this limit is at most
 2 GiB, or this resource is unlimited.
 RLIMIT_CORE
 This is the maximum size of a core file (see core(5)) in
 bytes that the process may dump. When 0 no core dump files
 are created. When nonzero, larger dumps are truncated to
 this size.
 RLIMIT_CPU
 This is a limit, in seconds, on the amount of CPU time that
 the process can consume. When the process reaches the soft
 limit, it is sent a SIGXCPU signal. The default action for
 this signal is to terminate the process. However, the
 signal can be caught, and the handler can return control to
 the main program. If the process continues to consume CPU
 time, it will be sent SIGXCPU once per second until the
 hard limit is reached, at which time it is sent SIGKILL.
 (This latter point describes Linux behavior.
 Implementations vary in how they treat processes which
 continue to consume CPU time after reaching the soft limit.
 Portable applications that need to catch this signal should
 perform an orderly termination upon first receipt of
 SIGXCPU.)
 RLIMIT_DATA
 This is the maximum size of the process's data segment
 (initialized data, uninitialized data, and heap). The
 limit is specified in bytes, and is rounded down to the
 system page size. This limit affects calls to brk(2),
 sbrk(2), and (since Linux 4.7) mmap(2), which fail with the
 error ENOMEM upon encountering the soft limit of this
 resource.
 RLIMIT_FSIZE
 This is the maximum size in bytes of files that the process
 may create. Attempts to extend a file beyond this limit
 result in delivery of a SIGXFSZ signal. By default, this
 signal terminates a process, but a process can catch this
 signal instead, in which case the relevant system call
 (e.g., write(2), truncate(2)) fails with the error EFBIG.
 RLIMIT_LOCKS (Linux 2.4.0 to Linux 2.4.24)
 This is a limit on the combined number of flock(2) locks
 and fcntl(2) leases that this process may establish.
 RLIMIT_MEMLOCK
 This is the maximum number of bytes of memory that may be
 locked into RAM. This limit is in effect rounded down to
 the nearest multiple of the system page size. This limit
 affects mlock(2), mlockall(2), and the mmap(2) MAP_LOCKED
 operation. Since Linux 2.6.9, it also affects the
 shmctl(2) SHM_LOCK operation, where it sets a maximum on
 the total bytes in shared memory segments (see shmget(2))
 that may be locked by the real user ID of the calling
 process. The shmctl(2) SHM_LOCK locks are accounted for
 separately from the per-process memory locks established by
 mlock(2), mlockall(2), and mmap(2) MAP_LOCKED; a process
 can lock bytes up to this limit in each of these two
 categories.
 Before Linux 2.6.9, this limit controlled the amount of
 memory that could be locked by a privileged process. Since
 Linux 2.6.9, no limits are placed on the amount of memory
 that a privileged process may lock, and this limit instead
 governs the amount of memory that an unprivileged process
 may lock.
 RLIMIT_MSGQUEUE (since Linux 2.6.8)
 This is a limit on the number of bytes that can be
 allocated for POSIX message queues for the real user ID of
 the calling process. This limit is enforced for
 mq_open(3). Each message queue that the user creates
 counts (until it is removed) against this limit according
 to the formula:
 Since Linux 3.5:
 bytes = attr.mq_maxmsg * sizeof(struct msg_msg) +
 MIN(attr.mq_maxmsg, MQ_PRIO_MAX) *
 sizeof(struct posix_msg_tree_node)+
 /* For overhead */
 attr.mq_maxmsg * attr.mq_msgsize;
 /* For message data */
 Linux 3.4 and earlier:
 bytes = attr.mq_maxmsg * sizeof(struct msg_msg *) +
 /* For overhead */
 attr.mq_maxmsg * attr.mq_msgsize;
 /* For message data */
 where attr is the mq_attr structure specified as the fourth
 argument to mq_open(3), and the msg_msg and
 posix_msg_tree_node structures are kernel-internal
 structures.
 The "overhead" addend in the formula accounts for overhead
 bytes required by the implementation and ensures that the
 user cannot create an unlimited number of zero-length
 messages (such messages nevertheless each consume some
 system memory for bookkeeping overhead).
 RLIMIT_NICE (since Linux 2.6.12, but see BUGS below)
 This specifies a ceiling to which the process's nice value
 can be raised using setpriority(2) or nice(2). The actual
 ceiling for the nice value is calculated as 20 - rlim_cur.
 The useful range for this limit is thus from 1
 (corresponding to a nice value of 19) to 40 (corresponding
 to a nice value of -20). This unusual choice of range was
 necessary because negative numbers cannot be specified as
 resource limit values, since they typically have special
 meanings. For example, RLIM_INFINITY typically is the same
 as -1. For more detail on the nice value, see sched(7).
 RLIMIT_NOFILE
 This specifies a value one greater than the maximum file
 descriptor number that can be opened by this process.
 Attempts (open(2), pipe(2), dup(2), etc.) to exceed this
 limit yield the error EMFILE. (Historically, this limit
 was named RLIMIT_OFILE on BSD.)
 Since Linux 4.5, this limit also defines the maximum number
 of file descriptors that an unprivileged process (one
 without the CAP_SYS_RESOURCE capability) may have "in
 flight" to other processes, by being passed across UNIX
 domain sockets. This limit applies to the sendmsg(2)
 system call. For further details, see unix(7).
 RLIMIT_NPROC
 This is a limit on the number of extant process (or, more
 precisely on Linux, threads) for the real user ID of the
 calling process. So long as the current number of
 processes belonging to this process's real user ID is
 greater than or equal to this limit, fork(2) fails with the
 error EAGAIN.
 The RLIMIT_NPROC limit is not enforced for processes that
 have either the CAP_SYS_ADMIN or the CAP_SYS_RESOURCE
 capability, or run with real user ID 0.
 RLIMIT_RSS
 This is a limit (in bytes) on the process's resident set
 (the number of virtual pages resident in RAM). This limit
 has effect only in Linux 2.4.x, x < 30, and there affects
 only calls to madvise(2) specifying MADV_WILLNEED.
 RLIMIT_RTPRIO (since Linux 2.6.12, but see BUGS)
 This specifies a ceiling on the real-time priority that may
 be set for this process using sched_setscheduler(2) and
 sched_setparam(2).
 For further details on real-time scheduling policies, see
 sched(7)
 RLIMIT_RTTIME (since Linux 2.6.25)
 This is a limit (in microseconds) on the amount of CPU time
 that a process scheduled under a real-time scheduling
 policy may consume without making a blocking system call.
 For the purpose of this limit, each time a process makes a
 blocking system call, the count of its consumed CPU time is
 reset to zero. The CPU time count is not reset if the
 process continues trying to use the CPU but is preempted,
 its time slice expires, or it calls sched_yield(2).
 Upon reaching the soft limit, the process is sent a SIGXCPU
 signal. If the process catches or ignores this signal and
 continues consuming CPU time, then SIGXCPU will be
 generated once each second until the hard limit is reached,
 at which point the process is sent a SIGKILL signal.
 The intended use of this limit is to stop a runaway real-
 time process from locking up the system.
 For further details on real-time scheduling policies, see
 sched(7)
 RLIMIT_SIGPENDING (since Linux 2.6.8)
 This is a limit on the number of signals that may be queued
 for the real user ID of the calling process. Both standard
 and real-time signals are counted for the purpose of
 checking this limit. However, the limit is enforced only
 for sigqueue(3); it is always possible to use kill(2) to
 queue one instance of any of the signals that are not
 already queued to the process.
 RLIMIT_STACK
 This is the maximum size of the process stack, in bytes.
 Upon reaching this limit, a SIGSEGV signal is generated.
 To handle this signal, a process must employ an alternate
 signal stack (sigaltstack(2)).
 Since Linux 2.6.23, this limit also determines the amount
 of space used for the process's command-line arguments and
 environment variables; for details, see execve(2).
 prlimit()
 The Linux-specific prlimit() system call combines and extends the
 functionality of setrlimit() and getrlimit(). It can be used to
 both set and get the resource limits of an arbitrary process.
 The resource argument has the same meaning as for setrlimit() and
 getrlimit().
 If the new_limit argument is not NULL, then the rlimit structure
 to which it points is used to set new values for the soft and hard
 limits for resource. If the old_limit argument is not NULL, then
 a successful call to prlimit() places the previous soft and hard
 limits for resource in the rlimit structure pointed to by
 old_limit.
 The pid argument specifies the ID of the process on which the call
 is to operate. If pid is 0, then the call applies to the calling
 process. To set or get the resources of a process other than
 itself, the caller must have the CAP_SYS_RESOURCE capability in
 the user namespace of the process whose resource limits are being
 changed, or the real, effective, and saved set user IDs of the
 target process must match the real user ID of the caller and the
 real, effective, and saved set group IDs of the target process
 must match the real group ID of the caller.

RETURN VALUE top

 On success, these system calls return 0. On error, -1 is
 returned, and errno  is set to indicate the error.

ERRORS top

 EFAULT A pointer argument points to a location outside the
 accessible address space.
 EINVAL The value specified in resource is not valid; or, for
 setrlimit() or prlimit(): rlim->rlim_cur was greater than
 rlim->rlim_max.
 EPERM An unprivileged process tried to raise the hard limit; the
 CAP_SYS_RESOURCE capability is required to do this.
 EPERM The caller tried to increase the hard RLIMIT_NOFILE limit
 above the maximum defined by /proc/sys/fs/nr_open (see
 proc(5))
 EPERM (prlimit()) The calling process did not have permission to
 set limits for the process specified by pid.
 ESRCH Could not find a process with the ID specified in pid.

ATTRIBUTES top

 For an explanation of the terms used in this section, see
 attributes(7).
 ┌──────────────────────────────────────┬───────────────┬─────────┐
 │ Interface Attribute Value │
 ├──────────────────────────────────────┼───────────────┼─────────┤
 │ getrlimit(), setrlimit(), prlimit() │ Thread safety │ MT-Safe │
 └──────────────────────────────────────┴───────────────┴─────────┘

STANDARDS top

 getrlimit()
 setrlimit()
 POSIX.1-2008.
 prlimit()
 Linux.
 RLIMIT_MEMLOCK and RLIMIT_NPROC derive from BSD and are not
 specified in POSIX.1; they are present on the BSDs and Linux, but
 on few other implementations. RLIMIT_RSS derives from BSD and is
 not specified in POSIX.1; it is nevertheless present on most
 implementations. RLIMIT_MSGQUEUE, RLIMIT_NICE, RLIMIT_RTPRIO,
 RLIMIT_RTTIME, and RLIMIT_SIGPENDING are Linux-specific.

HISTORY top

 getrlimit()
 setrlimit()
 POSIX.1-2001, SVr4, 4.3BSD.
 prlimit()
 Linux 2.6.36, glibc 2.13.

NOTES top

 A child process created via fork(2) inherits its parent's resource
 limits. Resource limits are preserved across execve(2).
 Resource limits are per-process attributes that are shared by all
 of the threads in a process.
 Lowering the soft limit for a resource below the process's current
 consumption of that resource will succeed (but will prevent the
 process from further increasing its consumption of the resource).
 One can set the resource limits of the shell using the built-in
 ulimit command (limit in csh(1)). The shell's resource limits are
 inherited by the processes that it creates to execute commands.
 Since Linux 2.6.24, the resource limits of any process can be
 inspected via /proc/pid/limits; see proc(5).
 Ancient systems provided a vlimit() function with a similar
 purpose to setrlimit(). For backward compatibility, glibc also
 provides vlimit(). All new applications should be written using
 setrlimit().
 C library/kernel ABI differences
 Since glibc 2.13, the glibc getrlimit() and setrlimit() wrapper
 functions no longer invoke the corresponding system calls, but
 instead employ prlimit(), for the reasons described in BUGS.
 The name of the glibc wrapper function is prlimit(); the
 underlying system call is prlimit64().

BUGS top

 In older Linux kernels, the SIGXCPU and SIGKILL signals delivered
 when a process encountered the soft and hard RLIMIT_CPU limits
 were delivered one (CPU) second later than they should have been.
 This was fixed in Linux 2.6.8.
 In Linux 2.6.x kernels before Linux 2.6.17, a RLIMIT_CPU limit of
 0 is wrongly treated as "no limit" (like RLIM_INFINITY). Since
 Linux 2.6.17, setting a limit of 0 does have an effect, but is
 actually treated as a limit of 1 second.
 A kernel bug means that RLIMIT_RTPRIO does not work in Linux
 2.6.12; the problem is fixed in Linux 2.6.13.
 In Linux 2.6.12, there was an off-by-one mismatch between the
 priority ranges returned by getpriority(2) and RLIMIT_NICE. This
 had the effect that the actual ceiling for the nice value was
 calculated as 19 - rlim_cur. This was fixed in Linux 2.6.13.
 Since Linux 2.6.12, if a process reaches its soft RLIMIT_CPU limit
 and has a handler installed for SIGXCPU, then, in addition to
 invoking the signal handler, the kernel increases the soft limit
 by one second. This behavior repeats if the process continues to
 consume CPU time, until the hard limit is reached, at which point
 the process is killed. Other implementations do not change the
 RLIMIT_CPU soft limit in this manner, and the Linux behavior is
 probably not standards conformant; portable applications should
 avoid relying on this Linux-specific behavior. The Linux-specific
 RLIMIT_RTTIME limit exhibits the same behavior when the soft limit
 is encountered.
 Kernels before Linux 2.4.22 did not diagnose the error EINVAL for
 setrlimit() when rlim->rlim_cur was greater than rlim->rlim_max.
 Linux doesn't return an error when an attempt to set RLIMIT_CPU
 has failed, for compatibility reasons.
 Representation of "large" resource limit values on 32-bit platforms
 The glibc getrlimit() and setrlimit() wrapper functions use a
 64-bit rlim_t data type, even on 32-bit platforms. However, the
 rlim_t data type used in the getrlimit() and setrlimit() system
 calls is a (32-bit) unsigned long. Furthermore, in Linux, the
 kernel represents resource limits on 32-bit platforms as unsigned
 long. However, a 32-bit data type is not wide enough. The most
 pertinent limit here is RLIMIT_FSIZE, which specifies the maximum
 size to which a file can grow: to be useful, this limit must be
 represented using a type that is as wide as the type used to
 represent file offsets—that is, as wide as a 64-bit off_t
 (assuming a program compiled with _FILE_OFFSET_BITS=64).
 To work around this kernel limitation, if a program tried to set a
 resource limit to a value larger than can be represented in a
 32-bit unsigned long, then the glibc setrlimit() wrapper function
 silently converted the limit value to RLIM_INFINITY. In other
 words, the requested resource limit setting was silently ignored.
 Since glibc 2.13, glibc works around the limitations of the
 getrlimit() and setrlimit() system calls by implementing
 setrlimit() and getrlimit() as wrapper functions that call
 prlimit().

EXAMPLES top

 The program below demonstrates the use of prlimit().
 #define _GNU_SOURCE
 #define _FILE_OFFSET_BITS 64
 #include <err.h>
 #include <stdint.h>
 #include <stdio.h>
 #include <stdlib.h>
 #include <sys/resource.h>
 #include <time.h>
 int
 main(int argc, char *argv[])
 {
 pid_t pid;
 struct rlimit old, new;
 struct rlimit *newp;
 if (!(argc == 2 || argc == 4)) {
 fprintf(stderr, "Usage: %s <pid> [<new-soft-limit> "
 "<new-hard-limit>]\n", argv[0]);
 exit(EXIT_FAILURE);
 }
 pid = atoi(argv[1]); /* PID of target process */
 newp = NULL;
 if (argc == 4) {
 new.rlim_cur = atoi(argv[2]);
 new.rlim_max = atoi(argv[3]);
 newp = &new;
 }
 /* Set CPU time limit of target process; retrieve and display
 previous limit */
 if (prlimit(pid, RLIMIT_CPU, newp, &old) == -1)
 err(EXIT_FAILURE, "prlimit-1");
 printf("Previous limits: soft=%jd; hard=%jd\n",
 (intmax_t) old.rlim_cur, (intmax_t) old.rlim_max);
 /* Retrieve and display new CPU time limit */
 if (prlimit(pid, RLIMIT_CPU, NULL, &old) == -1)
 err(EXIT_FAILURE, "prlimit-2");
 printf("New limits: soft=%jd; hard=%jd\n",
 (intmax_t) old.rlim_cur, (intmax_t) old.rlim_max);
 exit(EXIT_SUCCESS);
 }

SEE ALSO top

 prlimit(1), dup(2), fcntl(2), fork(2), getrusage(2), mlock(2),
 mmap(2), open(2), quotactl(2), sbrk(2), shmctl(2), malloc(3),
 sigqueue(3), ulimit(3), core(5), capabilities(7), cgroups(7),
 credentials(7), signal(7)

COLOPHON top

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 for this manual page, see
 ⟨https://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/docs/man-pages/man-pages.git/tree/CONTRIBUTING⟩.
 This page was obtained from the tarball man-pages-6.10.tar.gz
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 man-pages@man7.org
Linux man-pages 6.10 2024年07月23日 getrlimit(2)

Pages that refer to this page: homectl(1), prlimit(1), renice(1), strace(1), systemd-nspawn(1), brk(2), dup(2), execve(2), fcntl(2), fork(2), getpriority(2), getrusage(2), io_uring_register(2), io_uring_setup(2), madvise(2), memfd_secret(2), mlock(2), mmap(2), mremap(2), nice(2), open(2), perf_event_open(2), pidfd_getfd(2), pidfd_open(2), PR_SET_MM_START_BRK(2const), quotactl(2), seccomp(2), seccomp_unotify(2), select(2), shmctl(2), sigaltstack(2), syscalls(2), timer_create(2), write(2), errno(3), getdtablesize(3), io_uring_register_files(3), io_uring_register_files_sparse(3), io_uring_register_files_tags(3), io_uring_register_files_update(3), io_uring_register_files_update_tag(3), malloc(3), mq_open(3), pthread_attr_setstacksize(3), pthread_create(3), pthread_getattr_np(3), pthread_setschedparam(3), pthread_setschedprio(3), ulimit(3), core(5), limits.conf(5), lxc.container.conf(5), proc_pid_limits(5), proc_pid_stat(5), proc_pid_status(5), proc_sys_fs(5), proc_sys_kernel(5), systemd.exec(5), systemd-system.conf(5), capabilities(7), cgroups(7), credentials(7), fanotify(7), mq_overview(7), pthreads(7), sched(7), signal(7), time(7), unix(7), systemd-coredump(8)



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