How to get /etc/security/limits.conf changes reflected for processes running under headless user? [closed]
Asked Answered
C

1

7

To increase the FD limit for all processes on a Ubuntu Linux machine we did following changes in /etc/security/limits.conf

 soft nofile 10000
 hard nofile 10000

We also added session required pam_limits.so in /etc/pam.d/login. The changes got reflected for all the users who logged out and logged in again. Whatever new processes are starting under those users are getting new FD limits.

But for the processes which are running under headless user the changes are not getting reflected. what is the way by which the changes can be reflected for the processes which are running under headless user as well ?

Caporetto answered 28/12, 2012 at 11:26 Comment(1)
What do you mean with headless user?Smokedry
M
5

I had the same problem (with root/myuser) and was unable to find a definitive answer. I ended up just adding

ulimit -n 64000

To the init.d script that launches the process (Elastic search in this case), and this seems to do the trick.

Hopefully someone else knows a better solution!

Moller answered 28/12, 2012 at 11:33 Comment(3)
you must be launching the init.d script using sudo rights because of which ulimit -n might be working. In my case the script which launches the process is not run under root privileges so using ulimit which requires root privileges is not an option hereCaporetto
Yes that is correct. I do not understand why the /etc/security/limits.conf seem not to apply to the init.d script. (I can launch it manually after the fact and the limits are as expected!)Moller
In my particular case, the application which I was running was begun with sudo. I believed that the limits would therefore be applied from the root user's account. I was wrong. Instead, I found that, although the application was running as root, the limits applied to it were the limits belonging to the user which launched the application.Dew

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