\section ulimit ulimit - set or get the shells resource usage limits
\subsection ulimit-synopsis Synopsis
ulimit [OPTIONS] [LIMIT]
\subsection ulimit-description Description
The ulimit builtin is used to set the resource usage limits of the
shell and any processes spawned by it. If a new limit value is
omitted, the current value of the limit of the resource is printed.
Use one of the following switches to specify which resource limit to set or report:
- -c
or --core-size
The maximum size of core files created. By setting this limit to zero, core dumps can be disabled.
- -d
or --data-size
The maximum size of a process's data segment
- -f
or --file-size
The maximum size of files created by the shell
- -l
or --lock-size
The maximum size that may be locked into memory
- -m
or --resident-set-size
The maximum resident set size
- -n
or --file-descriptor-count
The maximum number of open file descriptors (most systems do not allow this value to be set)
- -s
or --stack-size
The maximum stack size
- -t
or --cpu-time
The maximum amount of cpu time in seconds
- -u
or --process-count
The maximum number of processes available to a single user
- -v
or --virtual-memory-size
The maximum amount of virtual memory available to the shell. If supported by OS.
Note that not all these limits are available in all operating systems.
The value of limit can be a number in the unit specified for
the resource or one of the special values hard, soft, or unlimited,
which stand for the current hard limit, the current soft limit, and no
limit, respectively.
If limit is given, it is the new value of the specified resource. If
no option is given, then -f is assumed. Values are in kilobytes,
except for -t, which is in seconds and -n and -u, which are unscaled
values. The return status is 0 unless an invalid option or argument is
supplied, or an error occurs while setting a new limit.
ulimit also accepts the following switches that determine what type of
limit to set:
- -H
or --hard
Set hard resource limit
- -S
or --soft
Set soft resource limit
A hard limit can only be decreased, once it is set it can not be
increased; a soft limit may be increased up to the value of the hard
limit. If neither -H nor -S is specified, both the soft and hard
limits are updated when assigning a new limit value, and the soft
limit is used when reporting the current value.
The following additional options are also understood by ulimit:
- -a
or --all
Print all current limits
- -h
or --help
Display help and exit
The fish implementation of ulimit should behave identically to the
implementation in bash, except for these differences:
- Fish ulimit supports GNU-style long options for all switches
- Fish ulimit does not support the -p option for getting the pipe size. The bash implementation consists of a compile-time check that empirically guesses this number by writing to a pipe and waiting for SIGPIPE. Fish does not do this because it this method of determining pipe size is unreliable. Depending on bash version, there may also be further additional limits to set in bash that do not exist in fish.
- Fish ulimit does not support getting or setting multiple limits in one command, except reporting all values using the -a switch
\subsection ulimit-example Example
ulimit -Hs 64
would set the hard stack size limit to 64 kB: